Litcius/Paper detail

The 6 degrees of curriculum integration in medical education in the United States

Julie Youm, Jennifer G. Christner, Kevin Hittle, Paul Ko, Cinda Stone, Angela Blood, Samara Ginzburg

2024Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite explicit expectations and accreditation requirements for integrated curriculum, there needs to be more clarity around an accepted common definition, best practices for implementation, and criteria for successful curriculum integration. To address the lack of consensus surrounding integration, we reviewed the literature and herein propose a definition for curriculum integration for the medical education audience. We further believe that medical education is ready to move beyond “horizontal” (1-dimensional) and “vertical” (2-dimensional) integration and propose a model of “6 degrees of curriculum integration” to expand the 2-dimensional concept for future designs of medical education programs and best prepare learners to meet the needs of patients. These 6 degrees include: interdisciplinary, timing and sequencing, instruction and assessment, incorporation of basic and clinical sciences, knowledge and skills-based competency progression, and graduated responsibilities in patient care. We encourage medical educators to look beyond 2-dimensional integration to this holistic and interconnected representation of curriculum integration.

Topics & Concepts

CurriculumAccreditationCLARITYCurriculum mappingHorizontal integrationMedical educationCurriculum theoryIntegrated curriculumComputer scienceEngineering ethicsMedicineCurriculum developmentPsychologyPedagogyEngineeringBusinessChemistryMarketingBiochemistryInnovations in Medical EducationClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsEmpathy and Medical Education