50 min

Gamifying Medical Education, Ft. Dr. Paulius Mui and Table Rounds The Short Coat

    • Education

How Gaming Can Help You Learn Medicine Better

TL;DR

Rote memorization is part of medical education, but drawing deeper connections between concepts is what makes you a physician.

Medical school emphasizes finding the correct answer, but when you begin to practice medicine you’ll find that the answers are much more complex than that.

Although moving from med school to residency can be scary–as with any transition–Paulius found it to be easier than he expected.



Dr. Paulius Mui is a first-year family medicine resident in Virginia, and a long-time listener (since before med school!). He wrote to Dave not long ago because he had published a game called Table Rounds. It’s a game he and his friends in med school had made up, and now he’s working to bring it into the world as an actual product.



Paulius sent Dave a copy of the game, and M1s AJ Chowdhury, Alex Belzer, Nolan Redetzke, and M4 Joyce Wahba play the game. Players use cards–each with a medical term or concept on it–to draw connections between them. The connections can be deep or they can be spurious, but if you can make your case you’re a winner. But perhaps more importantly, it’s a game that you can make your own, coming up with rules that make it even more interesting and helpful.



Paulius also gives his advice to Joyce, who’s about to start her residency in Emergency Medicine, and discusses his first-year as a resident beginning while the pandemic raged.



We Want to Hear From You

How’d we do on this week’s show? Did we miss anything in our conversation? Did we anger you? Did we make you smile? Call us at 347-SHORTCT anytime or email theshortcoats@gmail.com. It’s always a pleasure to hear from you!

How Gaming Can Help You Learn Medicine Better

TL;DR

Rote memorization is part of medical education, but drawing deeper connections between concepts is what makes you a physician.

Medical school emphasizes finding the correct answer, but when you begin to practice medicine you’ll find that the answers are much more complex than that.

Although moving from med school to residency can be scary–as with any transition–Paulius found it to be easier than he expected.



Dr. Paulius Mui is a first-year family medicine resident in Virginia, and a long-time listener (since before med school!). He wrote to Dave not long ago because he had published a game called Table Rounds. It’s a game he and his friends in med school had made up, and now he’s working to bring it into the world as an actual product.



Paulius sent Dave a copy of the game, and M1s AJ Chowdhury, Alex Belzer, Nolan Redetzke, and M4 Joyce Wahba play the game. Players use cards–each with a medical term or concept on it–to draw connections between them. The connections can be deep or they can be spurious, but if you can make your case you’re a winner. But perhaps more importantly, it’s a game that you can make your own, coming up with rules that make it even more interesting and helpful.



Paulius also gives his advice to Joyce, who’s about to start her residency in Emergency Medicine, and discusses his first-year as a resident beginning while the pandemic raged.



We Want to Hear From You

How’d we do on this week’s show? Did we miss anything in our conversation? Did we anger you? Did we make you smile? Call us at 347-SHORTCT anytime or email theshortcoats@gmail.com. It’s always a pleasure to hear from you!

50 min

Top Podcasts In Education

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck Podcast
Mark Manson
Growth Mindset: Psychology of self-improvement
Growth Mindset Psychology
TED Talks Daily
TED
6 Minute English
BBC Radio
How to Be a Better Human
TED and PRX
The Wizard Liz
The Wizard Liz

More by Meded Media

The Short Coat
Dave Etler and the Students of the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine
The Premed Years
Ryan Gray
Ask Dr. Gray: Premed Q&A
Ryan Gray
Specialty Stories
Ryan Gray
The MCAT Podcast
Ryan Gray
OldPreMeds Podcast
Ryan Gray