Writing
for Pre-Medical Students
ENC 3254, Fall 2009, MWF 7th, CBD lab
Carol Steen
501 Rolfs Hall
392-5421 to leave message
Office Hours: Tues/Thursday, 7th & by appt.
Mailbox: Rolfs 402 |
Interview Schedule Fall 2009
COURSE DESCRIPTION
Medical professionals have a special
obligation to communicate
without ambiguity, either in the written or spoken word; they depend on
their communication skills to interact productively with
other medical experts, their colleagues, clients and their families,
and the public at large. This course will provide
students with the opportunity to participate in a range of activities focusing on
researching, processing, and sharing medical information
with others. Given our current evidence-based
medical culture, students will learn to conduct research using medical
databases and other research tools, as well as discover how best to present their findings to other medical professionals. The healthcare professional must often act as
intermediary between the specialized world of scientific research and
the more pragmatic world of the general public;
consequently, we will also investigate how best to present technical
medical information to the layperson. Need further
convincing? Check out the following article on the Clinical
Skills Examination, now
required for all new doctors!
This course is predicated on the idea
that the ability to write and
speak clearly are learned skills, not innate talents, which means that
better communication can be learned by practice. Students will
experiment with a range of communication strategies in class: lectures
will be followed by focused written and oral activities that
allow students to put theory and strategies into practice. We will read
and dissect examples of both good writing in order to
learn from them, in addtion to examining several types of medical
writing. Students will also participate in a variety of
speaking assignments in class, ranging from casual class discussion to prepared
presentations.
ENC 3254 "Writing for Premed" fulfills the University's General
Education
requirement composition (C) and 6,000 words of writing (W).
Major Assignments
Medical
Communication Project
| This
is a two part assignment in which
you get to explore the process of evaluating different kinds of
medical information. First, you will dive into the web to search
among the primary literature for sources on a medical topic. This
will take you through the land of search engines to produce an
annotated bibliography. Second, you will produce a
state-of-the-art review paper targeted at medical
professionals.
|
Medical
School Application Project
| One of the (potentially) scariest hoops to
jump on the way to becoming a health practitioner is the med school interview. In
preparation for this hurdle, you will receive training and get the opportunity to practice by
participating in a mock
panel interview both as the interviewee and one of the interviewers. However, before
you can be chosen to interview, you
must apply to medical school. To this end, you will get the
opportunity to write (and rewrite!) the "personal statement,"
the essay which likely gets your foot in the door (along with your
obviously stellar GPA and
MCAT scores!). Also, you
will plan a chronological-functional resume designed for a particular
intership which will also aid you in filling out the 15 "job
and/or experience" spaces available
for this information on the AMCAS application.
|
Team Health Care Information
| Patients expect that doctors will provide them with more than a
diagnosis. Patients want information they understand from a source
that they trust. To answer this need, physicians are turning to the
internet to provide medical information for patients. Sometimes,
physicians will purchase pre-made pages from organizations providing
medical information. Othertimes, physicians will hire a web designer
to create a digital "office" where patients can find information. For
this assignment, you are the in-house medical information specialists
creating patient-oriented health information on some specific medical
issue. You will work with a partner to design an e-information page
that a medical practice could really use. |
COURSE TEXT:
There is no text for this class -- please refer to the class "Useful Links" page for required readings
Strongly Recommended: Medispell,
http://www.medispell.com/ (try the 10 day free trial first, preferably as you get ready to write the Review Paper!)
ATTENDANCE:
You are responsible for getting
assignments in on their due dates
and for keeping your speaking engagements. Papers are due at the
beginning of class on the assigned date, and one letter grade will be
subtracted for all late papers. Very late papers may not be accepted or
revisions will not be allowed. You must complete ALL assignments
in
order to pass the course. Both readings and assignments included in the
syllabus should be completed by the class following the assignment,
unless otherwise indicated. Even if you have an excused absence, you
should make every attempt to turn assignments in on time. We have a
strict attendance policy: on
your fourth absence, 40 points will
be deducted from your final grade. 10 points will be deducted for each
absence thereafter. The reason for this
policy is simple: unlike some of your classes, this is a skills-based
course. In other words, practice makes all the difference to writing
and
speaking skills; the more you write, or speak in public, the better you
become at these tasks. Consequently, the effects of this course are
cumulative, and frequent absences will affect your progress and success
dramatically.
Penalty for Plagiarism/Unethical
Writing
Practices
-- The instructor will call a private meeting with student to determine
student's
motivation for cheating. Penalties include the following:
- For
Unethical Writing Practices -- (these include various
forms of cheating that are not plagiarism, such as creating fraudulent
data/information, misattributing citations, using fraudulent citations,
using inappropriate sources) The student may be allowed to revise
document according to the
discretion of the instructor. Additional revision may or may not
be
allowed. Full credit for assignment may or may not be given
- For
Partial Plagiarism -- The student may be allowed to revise
document according to the
discretion of the instructor. Additional revision may or may not
be
allowed. Full credit for assignment may or may not be given
OR The student will fail the assignment with no chance of
revision (for first
offense).
- For
Extensive Plagiarism, the first penalty is to fail the
assignment with no chance of revision AND report to Student Honor Board
(for first offense).
- If plagiarism is discovered a second time,
the student will automatically fail the class AND the student will be
reported to the Student Honor Court.
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA STUDENTS’ ACADEMIC HONOR
CODE AND ACADEMIC HONESTY:
Please note: An academic honesty offense
is defined as the act of lying, cheating, or stealing academic
information so that one gains academic advantage. As a University of Florida
student, one is expected to neither commit nor assist another in
committing an academic honesty violation. Additionally, it is the
student's duty to report observed academic honesty violations.
Violations of the Honor Code and academic dishonesty will not be
tolerated. Specifically, instructors will rigorously pursue incidents
of plagiarism of any type or incidents of referring to any unauthorized
material for any class assignment. Before submitting any work for this
class, please read the policies about academic honesty at www.dso.ufl.edu/judicial/honestybrochure.htm,
and ask the instructors to clarify any expectations you do not
understand.
CLASSROOM BEHAVIOR:
Mature and respectful
behavior is expected in this classroom when dealing with instructors
and other students. Each
of you has significant individual experiences and will have unique
reactions to share with the class that will affect the dynamics of the
class as a whole. Side conversations, sleeping, and reading other
course material (or the Alligator, etc.) are not appropriate. Also, please turn off and put away your cell
phones and pagers prior to the start of class.
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