Journal of Medical Education
Abstract
This communication is the 4(superscript th) of a series of papers on McMaster students' perspectives on PBL in medical education(superscript [1-3]), with a special reference to stress associated with learning under PBL environment. Almost everywhere, attending advanced professional education such as law, medicine, and graduate studies(superscript [4-6]), especially for the first year, irrespet1ve of the nature of the curriculum, students are always taxed with a number of stressors. Some stressors are related to the change of physical environment, such as leaving home and adjusting oneself living in a new city. Some stressors are associated with changes in personal relationship, such as separating from and spending less time with love ones. Some stressors are due to financial constraints(superscript [7]) and some stressors are linked with matters affecting academic performance, such as increased workload, examinations, and other academic demand(superscript [8-10]). In this paper, members of a tutorial group of Prof. C.Y. Kwan express their sources of and coping strategies against stress in the study of medicine during the first 3 months in a PBL school. A senior pre-resident student who was also in Prof. Kwan's earlier group gave a different perspective on stress. A sabbaticant from Malaysia also gave her viewpoints in her apac1ty as an observer of this tutorial group.
First Page
1
Last Page
17
DOI
10.6145/jme.200503_9(1).0001
Recommended Citation
Kwan, Chiu-Yin; Kraftcheck, Erin; Knowles, Louise; Ip, Terence; Johnson, Melissa; Kanji, Jamil; Kliber, Agnes; McLeod, Heather; Jamal, Hanif; and Sim, Si-Mui
(2005)
"PBL-associated Stress in the First-year Unit-1 Medical Students at McMaster University,"
Journal of Medical Education: Vol. 9:
Iss.
1, Article 1.
DOI: [https://doi.org/]10.6145/jme.200503_9(1).0001
Available at:
https://jme.researchcommons.org/journal/vol9/iss1/1