responses to the “scientific foundations of future physicians” report: the effect on...
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Responses to the “Scientific Foundations of Future Physicians” report: the effect on Introductory Physics for the Life Sciences
Suzanne Amador Kane
Physics Department
Haverford College
Temple University, October 2012
Catherine CrouchSwarthmore College
Robert HilbornUniversity of Texas, Dallas
Tim McKayUniversity of Michigan
Mark ReevesGeorge Washington University
Outline
What is the Association of American Medical Colleges-Howard Hughes Medical Institute (AAMC-HHMI): Scientific Foundations for Future Physicians report?
AAMC MR5 – review and redesign of the Medical College Admissions Test
How Introductory Physics might change in response
Need for Change
• The approach to science education in the premedical and medical curriculum is largely unchanged for decades …. …. while biomedical sciences have changed dramatically.
• Readiness for medical school admission is defined by:– lists of required courses – content of the MCAT examination
• Both are rather static criteria, not very explicit about what students should be able to do
• The Bio2010 report (NAS, published 2002) concluded:– Fixed premedical science course requirements and
MCAT content constrain the undergraduate science curriculum
– This applies not just in biology but across the sciences
An example: • Many students who would make excellent physicians
identify premedical science course requirements such as Organic Chemistry as the reason they chose another career.
• Institutions wishing to innovate their chemistry curricula find it difficult to do so, given the externally imposed pre-med requirements
Need for Change
The Scientific Foundations For Future Physicians Project
• Initiated and organized by
– Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC)
– Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)
• Committee:
– medical school faculty
– undergraduate science and math educators.
• Diverse institutions
• MCAT leadership (a division of AAMC) closely involved
Committee members are drawn from both medical school and undergraduate institutions
Robert Alpern, Co-chair Yale School of Medicine
Sharon Long, Co-chair Stanford University
Science faculty [grad/undergrad]
Manuel Ares Cell biology U.C. Santa Cruz
Karin Akerfeldt Chemistry Haverford College
Julio de Paula Chemistry Lewis and Clark College
Robert Hilborn Physics University of Texas at Dallas
Dierdre Labat Biology Xavier University
Claudia Neuhauser Math University of Minnesota
Gregory Petsko Chemistry Brandeis University
Dee Silverthorne Biology University of Texas at Austin
Medical School faculty
Judith Bond Penn State University Medical School
Jules Dienstag Harvard Medical School
Andrew Fishleder Cleveland Clinic
Michael Friedlander Baylor College of Medicine
Gary Gibbons Morehouse School of Medicine
Paul Insel U.C. San Diego Medical School
Lynne Kirk U.T. Southwestern Medical Center
Bruce Korf University of Alabama Medical School
Vinay Kumar University of Chicago Medical School
Paul Marantz Albert Einstein School of Medicine
Committee members are drawn from both medical school and undergraduate institutions
Charge to the Committee
• What science competencies should medical students demonstrate, before receiving the M.D. degree?
• What science and mathematics competencies should premedical students demonstrate before entry into medical school.
• Emphasis should be on defined areas of knowledge, scientific concepts, and skills rather than on specific courses.
Undergraduate course requirements should be eliminated and replaced with a list of required competencies.– undergraduate schools will have flexibility to
design new curricula – interdisciplinary classes may be offered – innovative educational programs may encourage
students to enter medicine and the related biomedical sciences.
Strategy - 1Strategy - 1
No net increase in premed science requirements
– Liberal arts are important for education of physicians
– Presently, 1 year each of: physics, biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry and calculus
– If we recommend new competencies, then un-needed material should be removed from overall curriculum
Strategy - 2Strategy - 2
• Scientific competencies should be those required to practice medicine– includes interpretation of the scientific literature
– critical and skeptical thinking, analysis
• These competencies are not designed to prepare for a career in biomedical research.– Some schools may design curricula to prepare
students for careers in research
– Choice is up to each individual institution
Strategy - 3Strategy - 3
• Scientific competencies: – Reflect recent advances in the biomedical sciences– emphasize the increasingly close relationship with
the physical and mathematical sciences.
• Examples:– Statistics is important to allow physicians to be a
critical consumer of data from new clinical trials, research on genomic associations, etc.
– Biochemistry is more relevant than some aspects of organic chemistry presently emphasized
Strategy - 4Strategy - 4
Structure of Recommendations
Overarching Principles
• Competency (Medical or Entering) E1, E2, ….8= broad statement of goal for understanding
– Learning Objective 1, 2, etccompetencies in various areas
Examples 1, 2, etc.
Structure of RecommendationsTwo of the Overarching Principles:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of, and ability to use basic principles of:
– Mathematics and Statistics– Physics – Chemistry– Biochemistry– Biology
needed for the application of the sciences to human health and disease
2. Demonstrate observational and analytical skills and the ability to apply those skills and principles to biological situations.
Entering Med Student Competencies: E1 – E8
1. Apply quantitative reasoning and appropriate mathematics to describe or explain phenomena in the natural world
2. Demonstrate understanding of the process of scientific inquiry, and explain how scientific information is discovered and validated.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of basic physical principles and their applications to the understanding of living systems.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of basic principles of chemistry and some of their applications to the understanding of living systems.
5. Demonstrate knowledge of how bio-molecules contribute to the structure and function of cells.
6. Apply understanding of principles of how molecular and cell assemblies, organs, and organisms develop structure and carry out function.
7. Explain how organisms sense and control their internal environment and how they respond to external change.
8. Demonstrate an understanding of how the organizing principle of evolution by natural selection explains the diversity of life on earth.
Entering Med Student Competencies • Competency E1. Apply quantitative reasoning and appropriate
mathematics to describe or explain phenomena in the natural world.
• Learning Objectives:
5. Make inferences about natural phenomena using mathematical models.
– Examples• Describe the basic characteristics of models (e.g., multiplicative
vs. additive).• Predict short- and long-term growth of populations (e.g., bacteria
in culture).• Distinguish the role of indeterminacy in natural phenomena and
the impact of stochastic factors (e.g., radioactive decay) from the role of deterministic processes.
Entering Med Student Competencies • Competency E3. Demonstrate knowledge of basic physical
principles and their applications to the understanding of living systems
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate understanding of mechanics as applied to human and diagnostic systems.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of the principles of electricity and magnetism (e.g., charge, current flow, resistance, capacitance, potential, and magnetic fields).
3. Demonstrate knowledge of wave generation and propagation to the production and transmission of light and sound.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of the principles of thermodynamics and fluid motion.
5. Demonstrate knowledge of principles of quantum physics such as atomic and molecular energy levels, spin, and ionizing radiation
6. Demonstrate knowledge of principles of systems behavior, including input–output relationships and positive and negative feedback.
Entering Med Student Competencies • Competency E3. Demonstrate knowledge of basic physical
principles and their applications to the understanding of living systems
• Learning Objectives:
3. Demonstrate knowledge of wave generation & propagation to the production and transmission of light, sound.
- Examples• Apply geometric optics to understand image formation in the eye.• Apply wave optics to understand the limits of image resolution in
the eye.• Apply knowledge of sound waves to describe the use and
limitations of ultrasound imaging.
Calendar
• Report released in June, 2009• Accompanying editorial in Science• Now: coordinate work with undergraduate
institutions, scientific disciplines, medical school and MCAT organizations
• MCAT revision MR5 approved -- preview booklet released 2011—rollout in Jan. 2015
• Medical schools’ response now in progress
Challenges for Physics
• Devise courses that helps students meet the report’s competencies
• Sharpen the focus of intro physics for life sciences: not everything in the standard introductory physics course is relevant to life science students
• Work with other STEM colleagues to streamline and focus the pre-health curriculum
Report on 2009 Workshop on Intro Physics for Life Sciences
• 40+ physicists, life scientists, AAMC, APS, AAPT reps
• AAMC message: SFFP offers a way to innovate without previous MCAT/premed requirements as constraints
• Do the right thing—teach what physicians/life science students need to know—don’t just teach to MCAT (old or new)
Life science perspectives• Bio/Med more quantitative – students need to
use (more) physics now• Skill/knowledge transfer physics biology,
isn’t working• Make life science connections with physics in
class (not later)• New content: fluids, basic stat. physics
(diffusion, random walks, distributions), electrostatics in media, physical techniques, quantitative methods (data analysis, etc.)
2010 American Association of Medical Physicists meeting
• Residents: Med students tend to regard physics as something they take to pass their boards
• Physicists tend to teach physics in the abstract without telling them how it connects
• Only later do they realize how important it is• Medical physicists: emphasized need for more
medical physicists for retirement replacements and how much physics MD’s need to understand now
Audience Challenges
• IPLS students don’t understand course goals• Many feel they “can’t do physics”• Fixed ideas about “plug-and-chug”• Learning other approaches in other courses• “I went into the life sciences to avoid math
and physics”• Diverse student preparation, background• Diverse student majors, careers
Physics content in SFFP Report
• Most topics sound familiar• New bio/med emphases • What physics to omit/de-emphasize?• Swap engineering Life science examples
• New curricular materials needed: textbooks, good problems (relevant life science content)
The rub…Bottom-down approach: teach physics later
see an application ?“These students see biology in other courses;
this is their only chance to learn physics. Teach foundations, the rest will follow.”
Top-down approach: Bio problem motivates physics tools ?
“We know transfer isn’t happening with this approach; teach them what they need to know/use. The extra motivation results in their learning more physics.”
The No-Pain, No Physics-Loss IPLS Solution!
TEACHTHIS
NOTTHAT!
Less time on…
• Kinematics & friction-free trajectories• Constant force, acceleration• Friction• Hookean mass-spring systems• Kepler’s Laws• Gravitation
More time on…
• Actual trajectories• Acceleration from rest to a constant velocity• Energy• Dissipative systems (drag, etc.)• Thermodynamics at constant T, Pressure• Elasticity (simple continuum mechanics,
fracture, non-Hookean systems)• Fluids
About the same on…
• Waves & oscillations• Electricity & magnetism (most)• Modern / quantum physics
But with attention to applications in life sciences
Physics “process skills”
• Keep physics approach to math modeling• Simplifying problems, finding essential
features• Quantitative model-building• Empirical testing, limitations• Experimental design, critiquing, refinement
• . Some ideas and approaches to be included:• <ol>• <li>the possibility for open systems• <li>teach momentum conservation, but from
the point of view of interactions and impulse• <li>discuss energy realistically, that is include
all forms of ingoing and outcoming energy• <li>accounting for dissipative energy• <li>introduction of statistical principles• <li>discussing complexity, the idea of hidden
models in thermodynamics, but showing that statistical approaches connect these to fundamental interactions.
• <li>ideas of scale• <li>using circuits as an analogy for energy
input and output of a system.• </ol>• and others to be excluded:• <ol>• <li>equations that do not have conceptual
meaning• <li>discussions of steam engines• <li>discussions of entropy and disorder or of
entropy as a hidden cause of not being able to convert all heat to work
• <li>a focus on mechanical energy• <li>thermal expansion• </ol>
• A major goal of teaching about energy will be to demonstrate its universality so that studnets do not emerge from their science classes, as they often do now, with the sense that there is physics energy, chemistry energy, and biology energy.
• == Dynamics: particle motion, fluids, diffusion ==
• The general feeling was that kinematics in the sense of trajectory motion problems has little usefulness to the life science curriculum. These are problems that are endured, sometimes mastered, but rather quickly forgotten. Ideas from kinematics such as rate and acceleration do have application to problems in epidemiology, evolution, and population growth.
• What should be included?• <ol>• <li>Motion influenced by dissipation• <li>diffusion• <li>osmosis• <li>modeling on conservation principles to
illustrate and use the Bernouli equation• </ol>• What should be excluded• <ol>• <li>trajectory motion• <li>a heavy emphasis on inertial motion• <li>rotational kinematics, conservation of
angular momentum• </ol>
• == Forces and torques ==• Forces and torques as drivers of kinematics,
that is Newtonian mechanics, forms the heart of current introductory physics classes. This approach assumes that the students will be later thinking about problems that arise in inertial reference frames. Is this the correct approach when trying to solve problems in which dissipation plays a major role? Certainly one moves from accelerated motion to constant velocity when the dissipative force equals the driving force, and this comes straight from Newton's Laws of Motion. However, as traditionally taught, the three laws of motion are applied over and over to problems in which dissipation is ignored. Thus, our discussion centered on placing in the introductory course problems from fluid motion, fluids at low Reynolds numbers, and other examples where once the external force is removed, then then object ceases its motion.
• What should be included• <ol>• <li>Free body diagrams and resolution of
forces and torques• <li>motivating ideas from biomechanics:
strength of materials, muscle action, thresholds for damage
• <li>drag forces• </ol>• What should be excluded• <ol>• <li>gravitation• <li>Kepler's Laws• </ol>
• == Summary ==• In the end, it is worth repeating that we are
looking to teach an easily identifiable physics course that is enriched by life-science contents. Relevance is important as a motivating tool to inspire students to learn, and also that the material presented in the course will be useful to our students in subsequent classes. Thus it is important to also teach where the students will see these ideas in their biology and chemistry courses - a point made by the group who reported the life sciences perspective. We teach that Physics is the foundational science - the point is made more convincingly when we show our students the explicit connections to other sciences. Finally, we have a unique opportunity to teach a knowledge and understanding of physics that will allow our students to be better scientists and medical professionals.
How to (better) teach “Process Skills”
• How to harness student’s motivation to succeed in our courses?
• Learn about their other courses – connect explicitly to their chosen fields.
• Tell students these skills are a course goal• Relate to their future career goals• Test & grade based on these skills
How to (better) teach “Process Skills”
• Know students’ “initial knowledge state”• Scientific skills develop over the long-term—
coordinate with other departments?• Reference their other science course content?
Integrated courses? (integrated sciences @ Princeton? Harvard’s chem/physics intro course?)
• Improve lab & integrate into lecture
Assessment
• What do we want to assess? (what mix of content, skills, and attitudes)
• What existing assessment tools are useful?• What new tools are needed and how can they
be developed?• Can we test retention and/or transfer of skills
into later (non-physics) courses?• Many existing tools, but not aimed at this task
Education Research Challenges• How do IPLS students differ from other physic s populations?• How to use lessons from Physics Education Research ?• What new work can be done / needs to be done?Existing resources include:• HHMI-funded NEXUS group (U. Md., others)• Teaching problem-solving skills, U.Minnesota cooperative group
problem-solving (CGPS)• Hypothesis generation and testing: Rutgers group’s Investigative
Science Learning Environment (ISLE)• Explicit focus on reading and interpreting graphs (such as with
Real-Time Physics)• SCALE-UP and Arizona State -- modeling
Institutional support
• Blue ribbon panel—identify & publicize best practices
• Funding initiatives to support curricular development and institutional changes
• AAMC: Clarity on timing, logistics of implementation & assessment
• AAMC: More specifics on the new MCAT
Laboratories• How do we meet the goals of competencies E1 &
E2, while including more life science content into the physics laboratory curriculum?
• Many institutions have such labs
• New emphases: imaging, diffusion, random walks, medical applications of circuits, optics.
• How to incorporate lessons from physics education research (SCALE UP) to make students learn desired competencies from these experiences?
• Bone scaling & rubber elasticity
• Geometrical optics & the human eye
• Electrocardiography lab
Our Lab Examples
• DNA crystallography with visible light (Institute for Chemical Education)
• Fluids mechanics
• Ultrasound Imaging
• Animal trajectories
• Spectroscopy & Quantum Dots
Our Lab Examples
Ultrasound Imaging Physics
• Students use pulse-echo imaging to detect the presence of objects within medical “phantoms” (test samples)
• Both M-mode and B-mode imaging is supported
• The labs explore attenuation, spatial resolution and Time-Gain-Compensation.
• Final project involves imaging a medical model of breast tumors and a kidney “phantom” using an actual scanner
• Doppler and therapeutic units are also available for inexpensive purchase and lab use now
• Images: 3B Scientific & GE
Lab Examples from elsewhere
• Imaging & bacterial motility (George Washington University)
• Brownian Motion (Centre College, U. Md., Johns Hopkins)
• Fluids & microfluidics (Johns Hopkins)
Process skills in the lab
• Enhance transfer—show how physics leads into applications (Waves & Sound ultrasound imaging)
• Hypothesis testing: Bone Scaling simple Galilean theory does not work!
• Interpretation skills & data analysis• Teamwork• Reading (simple, basic) in the scientific
literature
Google: “intro physics life sciences”“AAMC-HHMI physics”
• http://www.haverford.edu/physics-astro/Amador/links/IPLSResources.php
• AAMC-HHMI report: http://www.aamc.org/newsroom/pressrel/2009/090604.htm
• New MCAT MR5: http://www.aamc.org/students/mcat/mr5/mr5shortoverview.pdf