MD Discovery 4: Clinical Scholar (MEDS90042)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 50On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | February |
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Fees | Look up fees |
This subject is the final in a series of four MD Discovery subjects embedded within the Doctor of Medicine course for students following the Clinical Scholar pathway. Students will engage in a total of 87.5 credit points of discovery-based learning in areas of interest across their course. Discovery learning allows medical students to engage in flexible, personalised and increasingly complex situational learning as they progress, providing opportunities to reflect on the professional practice of medicine in a variety of contexts and settings.
In the final two years of Discovery students will choose to extend their knowledge and skills in one of two pathways based on their learning needs and interests: the clinical scholar or research scholar pathway.
In Discovery 4: Clinical Scholar students will immerse themselves in an area of study with a focus on leadership and advocacy and develop scholarly work (output) that makes a novel contribution to the field, such as producing an evidence-based educational resource, completing a research project such as a literature review, developing a community information program, or implementing a new quality improvement process in the clinical setting.
Each of the learning options available within this subject is designed to enhance the student’s personal and professional growth and students are encouraged to choose options that broaden and deepen their learning. Students will preference an area of focus that may be informed by previous learning gained.
Students will have three 4-week terms in the first semester of the year which will be curated by focus. Placement settings of these terms may include but are not limited to community (including general practice) and hospital environments. All placement settings will have the capacity (including supervisory capacity) to facilitate students in taking a deeper dive and applying the principles of their focus area to that environment. The scholarly output and workplace-based assessments will also relate to the focus. In addition, students will be allocated 5 scholarly intensive weeks to concentrate on their scholarly output requirements without concurrent placement requirements.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
As a Scientist and Scholar:
- Apply ethical practice principles in the conduct of research or project work.
- Critically interpret, synthesise and communicate findings from a range of scientific and scholarly literature.
- Justify the choice of a research design or project work and methodology to address a research question or clinical need.
- Utilise strategies for keeping up to date and practising medicine in a specific context in line with the latest evidence.
As a Medical Practitioner:
- Perform clinical tasks (within the student's scope of practice) in their chosen field demonstrating patient assessment clinical reasoning and management in partnership with patients.
As a Health Advocate:
- Justify how their clinical engagement in a chosen field and scholarly output supports future practice to advance patient care at a systems level.
- Critique the role of the clinician scholar in advocating for and collaborating with First Nations patients and community to achieve health advancement and develop strategies for addressing inequities at an individual community and societal levels.
As a Professional and Leader:
- Engage as a self-regulated learner to inform professional practice, leadership, and professional identity as a clinician scholar.
- Work effectively and respectfully as a co-member and leader of a clinical team, recognising the contributions of all members to shared learning, to improve patient and populations health outcomes.
Generic skills
Students completing MD Discovery subjects will display skills in:
- Highly developed cognitive, analytic and problem-solving skills that best prepare them for professional practice.
- Ability to plan work and to use time effectively.
- Leadership capacity, including a willingness to engage in constructive public discourse, to accept social and civic responsibilities.
- Ability and self-confidence to comprehend complex concepts to express them lucidly, whether orally or in writing, and to confront unfamiliar problems.
- Ability and confidence to participate effectively in collaborative learning as a team-member, while respecting individual differences.
Last updated: 4 March 2025