Teaching and evaluation methods of medical ethics in the Saudi public medical colleges:cross-sectional questionnaire study
Dublin Core
Title
Teaching and evaluation methods of medical ethics in the Saudi public medical colleges:cross-sectional questionnaire study
Author
AlKabba, Abdulaziz F.
Hussein, Ghaiath Hussein
Kasule, Omar H.
Jarallah, Jamal
Alrukban, Mohamed
Alrashid, Abdulaziz
Hussein, Ghaiath Hussein
Kasule, Omar H.
Jarallah, Jamal
Alrukban, Mohamed
Alrashid, Abdulaziz
Publisher
9/10/13
Language
English
Publication Date
20130910
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Saudi Arabia is considered one of the most influential Muslim countries being as [sic] the host of the two most holy places for Muslims, namely Makkah and Madina. This was reflected in the emphasis on teaching medical ethics in a lecture-based format as a part of the subject of Islamic culture taught to medical students. Over the last few years, both teaching and evaluation of medical ethics have been changing as more Saudi academics received specialized training and qualifications in bioethics from western universities. METHODS: This study aims at studying the current teaching methods and evaluation tools used by the Saudi public medical schools. It is done using a self-administered online questionnaire. RESULTS: Out of the 14 medical schools that responded, the majority of the responding schools (6
Abstract Translated
42.8%), had no ethics departments; but all schools had a curriculum dedicated to medical ethics. These curricula were mostly developed by the faculty staff (12; 85.7%). The most popular teaching method was lecturing (13; 92.8%). The most popular form of student assessment was a paper-based final examination (6; 42.8%) at the end of the course that was allocated 40% or more of the total grade of the ethics course. Six schools (42.8%) allocated 15-30% of the total grade to research. CONCLUSION: Although there is a growing interest and commitment in teaching ethics to medical students in Saudi schools; there is lack of standardization in teaching and evaluation methods. There is a need for a national body to provide guidance for the medical schools to harmonize the teaching methods, particularly introducing more interactive and students-engaging methods on the account of passive lecturing.
Primary Classification
2.3
Secondary Classification
2.3;7.2
Primary keywords
medical education--[pri];medical ethics--[pri];questionnaire--[pri];teaching methods--[pri]
Secondary keywords
bioethics;curriculum;Islamic ethics;medical schools;medical students
Subject
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia--[pri]
Journal Article
BMC Medical Education2013 September 10; 13(1):122 17 p.
Link for Internet access
Call Number
citation
Bibliography
26 refs.
ISSN
14726920
Collection
Citation
“Teaching and evaluation methods of medical ethics in the Saudi public medical colleges:cross-sectional questionnaire study,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 16, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/36334.