Sixty Years of Learning and Teaching Physiology

Adv Physiol Educ. 2023 Jul 27. doi: 10.1152/advan.00094.2023. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThis is a memoir of my experiences in learning and teaching Physiology. It begins in 1962 when I entered the University of Washington as a medical student and began research in a physiology laboratory which led to a PhD degree in Physiology and Biophysics to go with my MD degree in 1968. At this time both groups of students participated in the same physiology course containing both lectures and laboratories. After postdoctoral research at the NIH and in Cambridge, UK, in 1973 I joined the faculty of the Department of Physiology, University of California, San Francisco where I participated in the teaching of medical students and graduate students for nearly fifteen years. By this time, teaching of medical and graduate students had largely separated. In 1987, I moved to the University of Michigan as Professor and Chair of Physiology where my role in teaching was organizational as well as participatory for the next 35 years. In this work I compare teaching of medical students as well as graduate students and focus on how it has changed over this 60-year period. Over this time both medical and graduate PhD education have become more integrative. Medical education is now taught in organ blocks rather than courses and I participated in organizing the teaching of the GI block. At Michigan there is no longer a separated medical school class in Physiology and graduate students enter a combined,...
Source: Advances in Physiology Education - Category: Physiology Authors: Source Type: research