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      The critical role of infrastructure and organizational culture in implementing competency-based education and individualized pathways in undergraduate medical education

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          Health professionals for a new century: transforming education to strengthen health systems in an interdependent world.

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            Unskilled and unaware of it: How difficulties in recognizing one's own incompetence lead to inflated self-assessments.

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              Competency-based medical education: theory to practice.

              Although competency-based medical education (CBME) has attracted renewed interest in recent years among educators and policy-makers in the health care professions, there is little agreement on many aspects of this paradigm. We convened a unique partnership - the International CBME Collaborators - to examine conceptual issues and current debates in CBME. We engaged in a multi-stage group process and held a consensus conference with the aim of reviewing the scholarly literature of competency-based medical education, identifying controversies in need of clarification, proposing definitions and concepts that could be useful to educators across many jurisdictions, and exploring future directions for this approach to preparing health professionals. In this paper, we describe the evolution of CBME from the outcomes movement in the 20th century to a renewed approach that, focused on accountability and curricular outcomes and organized around competencies, promotes greater learner-centredness and de-emphasizes time-based curricular design. In this paradigm, competence and related terms are redefined to emphasize their multi-dimensional, dynamic, developmental, and contextual nature. CBME therefore has significant implications for the planning of medical curricula and will have an important impact in reshaping the enterprise of medical education. We elaborate on this emerging CBME approach and its related concepts, and invite medical educators everywhere to enter into further dialogue about the promise and the potential perils of competency-based medical curricula for the 21st century.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Medical Teacher
                Medical Teacher
                Informa UK Limited
                0142-159X
                1466-187X
                April 08 2021
                July 22 2021
                April 08 2021
                : 43
                : sup2
                : S7-S16
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Medical Education Outcomes, American Medical Association, Chicago, USA
                [2 ]School of Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, USA
                [3 ]College of Medicine, University of Nebraska, Omaha, USA
                [4 ]Medical School, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
                [5 ]Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA
                [6 ]School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, USA
                Article
                10.1080/0142159X.2021.1924364
                34291715
                ee0f2db9-d439-4fa9-9e83-cf154d8d897f
                © 2021

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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