» Articles » PMID: 9580717

Beyond Curriculum Reform: Confronting Medicine's Hidden Curriculum

Overview
Journal Acad Med
Specialty Medical Education
Date 1998 May 15
PMID 9580717
Citations 435
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Throughout this century there have been many efforts to reform the medical curriculum. These efforts have largely been unsuccessful in producing fundamental changes in the training of medical students. The author challenges the traditional notion that changes to medical education are most appropriately made at the level of the curriculum, or the formal educational programs and instruction provided to students. Instead, he proposes that the medical school is best thought of as a "learning environment" and that reform initiatives must be undertaken with an eye to what students learn instead of what they are taught. This alternative framework distinguishes among three interrelated components of medical training: the formal curriculum, the informal curriculum, and the hidden curriculum. The author gives basic definitions of these concepts, and proposes that the hidden curriculum needs particular exploration. To uncover their institution's hidden curricula, he suggests that educators and administrators examine four areas: institutional policies, evaluation activities, resource-allocation decisions, and institutional "slang." He also describes how accreditation standards and processes might be reformed. He concludes with three recommendations for moving beyond curriculum reform to reconstruct the overall learning environment of medical education, including how best to move forward with the Medical School Objectives Project sponsored by the AAMC.

Citing Articles

Investigating Medical Ideas Transmitted Across Traditional Education: A Pilot Study.

Moen J, Shuck C Cureus. 2025; 17(1):e78125.

PMID: 40018502 PMC: 11866985. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.78125.


Conceptual competence in medicine: promoting psychosomatic awareness in clinics, research and education.

von Boetticher D Front Psychiatry. 2025; 16:1500638.

PMID: 39980980 PMC: 11840571. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1500638.


Background and Foreground: Connections and Distinctions When Health Professions Faculty Teach Both Interprofessional Collaborative Practice and Quality Improvement-A Case Study.

Stevenson K, Thor J, DEon M, Headrick L, Gare B J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2025; 12:23821205251318925.

PMID: 39936094 PMC: 11811988. DOI: 10.1177/23821205251318925.


"It's Very Cisnormatively Structured": An Interpretive Description of Undergraduate Nursing Students' Experiences of Gender Inclusive and Affirming Practices.

Crawford J, Kramer M, Ristock J, Schultz A Nurs Inq. 2025; 32(2):e12701.

PMID: 39917946 PMC: 11803551. DOI: 10.1111/nin.12701.


How Preceptor Behaviour Shapes the Future of Medical Professionals.

Alshareef M, Flemban A Adv Med Educ Pract. 2025; 16:135-144.

PMID: 39901878 PMC: 11789507. DOI: 10.2147/AMEP.S481620.