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#1 |
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Senior Member
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i was wondering if anyone can answer this................
how many dental school in U.s are PBL based?.. i recently been to USC for an interview and experienced the PBL session... it wasnt exactly my cup of tea... i just want to see if what you guys think of the PBL ..?.. good and bad?.. |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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At my Nova interview, Dr. Lippman told us that Indiana, Harvard, Columbia, USC, Case and a few others I can't remember were focused (not necessarily entirely) on PBL...I haven't been to any interviews yet for any of the PBL schools, so I don't know enough about it to decide whether I like it. But based off what I know, I prefer having a set schedule of exams, deadlines, and goals to meet, which PBL doesn't necessarily have.
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#3 | |
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I had an interview at Case.... multiple students there said you basically get a case, discuss it, divide up things to research, come back the next time, discuss your findings, and solve the case. The students really liked it. However, I was think PBL would be helpful to remember things in the long run and could be more practical when you get in the clinical setting.
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#4 | |
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#5 |
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#6 |
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I probably should use the search function, but what is PBL?
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"Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference." -Robert Frost, "The Road Not Taken" |
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#7 | |
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Problem based learning...its where you dont have ordinary lectures, but like previously posted, are given a problem or case, and learn theories through solving the problem. You aren't told the information, you figure it out for yourself
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#8 |
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Senior Member
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I think that PBL would work the best for the brightest students, such as Harvard students. For most of us dental school applicants who are well above average intelligence, but not quite geniuses, I think PBL would slow down the learning process. If you give a student a problem that is above their head, then there's going to be a lot of time wasted trying to solve it.
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#9 | |
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#10 |
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Senior Member
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I have a fairly positive view of PBL after attending USC's interview. It seems that you won't be stuck in class all day which leaves you time to study and even dedicate some time into extracurricular activities such as research, community outreach programs, or assisting. PBL will probably require more discipline to stay on top of your work, but which dental program doesn't require that?
PBL allows active learning and it can be more effective than just lectures. It isn't suited for everyone so you should definitely look into it before attending a school with a PBL curriculum. USC is also utilizing a "hybrid" curriculum (lecture and PBL) next year which should strengthen their program. I also heard they may remodel their clinics...
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#11 | |
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Senior Member
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#12 | |
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Senior Member
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Personally, if I was handed a bad or OK professor I would much rather be taught by lectures than PBL. |
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#13 | |
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Senior Member
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also, bad professors in traditional lectures = also no good if my school records lectures i'll probably only go during exam days (except i heard from USC student during my interview that if you divide the tuition to days of school, it comes out to be $900 / one day. I would not skip classes if im paying $900 a day...) |
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#14 |
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Senior Member
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Speaking of poor professors, I can't professors that just read off slides.
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#15 |
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MS-1
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For medical school (I'm sure it's similar in dental):
- Good: exchange ideas, think of the lecture topics at a much broader, more relevant level. - Bad: way too time consuming. There is very little bang for your buck, and time is short in med/dental/etc school. I think we can do without it b/c people who need to group learning to get by can easily form groups to do so. |
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#16 | |
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From the ashes.....
Status:
Medical Student
MDApps: Profile 16739
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio -- death comes with the many hills here
Posts: 25
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The serious downside is that you don't know how much depth you need to go in order to consider the learning objective answered satisfactorily. Example: what is hypertrophic cardiomyopathy? You could answer the basic description of what the heart looks like with the condition. Or you can do a 9 page writeup with citations from review articles from PubMed. But some objectives could be more straightfoward: what is the ADA's recommendations on prophylactic antibiotics for patients who have histories of heart disease or defects (including hypertropic cardiomyopathy)? But the simultaneous upside is how much you want to learn, and the PBL method is pretty flexible in that regard. You also get to exercise the [clinical] critical thinking process that lecture doesn't usually afford. |
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#17 |
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Midwestern doesn't use PBL, but we have case studies all 4 years that coincide with our basic sciences lecture material. This is only my first term, but I really like them because they allow us to Tx plan for a patient that has a common infection/genetic disorder commonly seen in practice. So far, we've had a diabetic, blood clotting disorder (factor 5 leiden deficient), metabolic syndrome, HIV, and skin cancer as the topics. We're broken into groups of 5 or 6 and we split up the learning objectives. We're responsible for a 20 minute powerpoint presentation that answers the learning objectives as well as the needs of the patient. We are also quizzed on the learning objectives as well as any assigned journal articles related to the topic. I think this format is advantageous because it provides us with a PBL-like experience without us having to rely upon it as our primary method of learning. We also start applying practical concepts learned in lecture to situations we may actually see out in private practice.
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Midwestern University Class of 2013
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#18 |
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Senior Member
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I'm just afraid that PBL won't be enough to prepare us for the first round of boards, which is just sciences as opposed to going to traditional lecture based teaching method. On the other hand, I am not looking forward to 30+ hours of class a week on a traditional lecture basis..so
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#19 |
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Another positive that no one has mentioned is that you get to know your professors. Definitely a positive for recommendations if you want to specialize or do the general dentistry internship.
By now, I have a good grasp on how I learn best. For me, the best program would be primarily lecture based, but still have some case-based learning. I think learning through example cases can make it more interesting. |
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#20 |
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Senior Member
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I loved developmental biology in college, which I think for most universities, like my school, is PBL structured. The nice thing about PBL in the classroom is that it forces active learning. However, you need lecture format to support it with the extra facts in between.
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#21 |
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PreDents.com
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IMO..PBL blows. But that's just me. I know lots who like it.
I just don't want to be taught by other students. How do I know they know what they are talking about? The top students don't take what others say as fact and look it up anyway. So why not just be taught by instructors who are experts in the material? A PBL session once a week would be fine as long as its more in your third/fourth year and clinically based, but to have the entire medical science based information in PBL is nutz!
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#22 |
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Senior Member
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I am D1 at case, and it's not too bad at all. I gotta say most of the time it feels like waste of time, because my group talks about all kinds of stupid stuff. But all in all, it's better than straight lecture, because I just can't handle 4~6 hours of straight lectures. How it works in Case, at least what I think, is it supplements the lectures rather than being whole another thing, so it's not too bad... If you got any specific questions you can ask me tho..
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#23 | |
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Senior Member
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I thinking that the PBL courses might make preparing for the NBDE part 1 much tougher since all that time could be used to cram more info the students heads. |
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#24 | |
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Senior Member
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As if there are really lower students at UCSF..sigh unless u're one of them!!!!!!! |
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Senior Member
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#26 | |
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#27 | |
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PreDents.com
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Ask anyone who got a great NBDE1 score...they teach themselves with review books/decks/text books/old exams. Your score means how bad you wanted it and how much you sacrificed for it. Even traditional lecture, half the class is asleep or Facebook'n it. The material isn't complex,..it's just a ton of it. 3rd and 4th year is different. That's clinical instruction by faculty with decades of experience that will make you a better dentist. Better listen to that stuff! |
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