This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. This paper describes practical tips and tools for delivering life sciences teaching, it is based on the authors' experiences at Norwich Medical School (NMS), which opened in 2002 at the University of East Anglia. The inaugural medical curriculum, including its ethos and how it is perceived by staff and students, have all been described previously.⁽¹⁻³⁾ Our 5 year medical degree at NMS is a modular, systems-based programme that integrates theory and clinical practice from the beginning. We use problem based learning (PBL) but teaching is also delivered via clinical placement; structured and simulated patient teaching; and via formal lectures and workshops. Core social science themes and life science themes run longitudinally through the course and spiral delivery of learning outcomes allows students to re-visit our themes, and particular topics, with increasing complexity. We offer ten tips here, about delivering the curricula for genetics, pharmacology, and prescribing. One challenge that we face, with a modular degree programme, is that we meet our students intermittently and throughout their years of study, and our science curriculum has been developed in response to this.
Keywords: genetics; pharmacology; systems based curriculum; technology enhanced learning.
Copyright: © 2017 Jennings BA et al.