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The Curbsiders Teach
The Curbsiders Teach
Author: The Curbsiders Teach
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Description
Curbsiders Teach is THE internal medicine podcast for all things medical education. We use expert interviews to inspire the next generation of medical educators by providing listeners with teaching pearls, practice-changing knowledge, and a learning objective-based dosing of Edutainment (medical education, made entertaining). Season 3 of this weekly mini-series will air every Tuesday starting April 4, 2023 on our website or wherever you get your podcasts!
We are so excited to bring you this new series in the Curbsiders Family focusing on medical education. Molly Heublein, MD and Era Kryzhanovskaya, MD are your hosts for the Curbsiders Teach- they are Clinician Educators with a passion for teaching. Whether you precept students, teach small groups, are involved in curricular design, or give CME lectures, we think you’ll find valuable skills. We have the pleasure of interviewing a variety of amazing experts in topics ranging from bedside teaching, feedback conversations, learner mental health, and time-variable competency based medical education. We can’t wait to share their expertise with you!
Website | Instagram | Twitter | Patreon | Free CME!| Youtube
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Send questions or suggestions to thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
We are so excited to bring you this new series in the Curbsiders Family focusing on medical education. Molly Heublein, MD and Era Kryzhanovskaya, MD are your hosts for the Curbsiders Teach- they are Clinician Educators with a passion for teaching. Whether you precept students, teach small groups, are involved in curricular design, or give CME lectures, we think you’ll find valuable skills. We have the pleasure of interviewing a variety of amazing experts in topics ranging from bedside teaching, feedback conversations, learner mental health, and time-variable competency based medical education. We can’t wait to share their expertise with you!
Website | Instagram | Twitter | Patreon | Free CME!| Youtube
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts
Subscribe on Spotify
Send questions or suggestions to thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
60 Episodes
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Join us as we take a journey through the land of educational theory, conceptual frameworks, and how to apply both of them in classroom and clinical teaching as health professions educators. You will walk away with practical tips and tricks about the use of theory to enhance your teaching with Drs. Jimmy Beck and Erick Hung.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer, Writer, Graphics: Era Kryzhanovskaya, MD
Hosts: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Editor: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD, Mike KW Cheng, MD, MAEd
Reviewer: Mike KW Cheng, MD, MAEd
Guest: Erick Hung, MD; Jimmy Beck, MD.
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Guest one-liner/ Best piece of advice
Definitions: What is educational theory?
Can you be a great teacher without theory?
Translating theory to practice: concrete examples
Faculty development for busy clinicians
Practical tips and low-barrier strategies
Motivational theories and the “warm demander”
Take home points
Outro
Feeling overwhelmed by clinical teaching? In this episode of The Curbsiders Teach, we dive into the essentials every new educator should know—from setting expectations and building a positive learning climate to dropping high-value teaching pearls on the fly. Our expert guest Elizabeth Gatewood DNP, FNP-C, CNE shares her best advice, biggest surprises, and go-to strategies for making teaching efficient, meaningful, and fun. Whether you're just starting out or refining your approach, this episode is packed with actionable insights you can use tomorrow.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer, Writer, Graphics: Molly Heublein MD
Hosts: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Editor: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Guest: Elizabeth Gatewood, DNP, FNP-C, CNE, FAANP, FAAN
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Guest one-liner/ Best piece of advice
Challenges to clinical teaching
Establishing a learning climate/orienting a learner
Goals and Feedback
Teaching clinical reasoning/One Minute Preceptor
Debriefing
Teaching on the fly
Focusing on Pearls
Setting expectations
Take home points
Outro
Get ready to transform how you think about Morbidity and Mortality (M&M) conferences! In this episode, Drs. John Erickson and Matthew Clark from Maine Medical Center share their powerful approach to coaching residents, fostering psychological safety, and using M&Ms as a springboard for growth—not shame. Whether you’re planning your first M&M or rethinking your program’s approach, this conversation is packed with insights you won’t want to miss!
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer CME: Molly Heublein MD
Hosts, editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Script, show notes, infographics: Karishma Patel MD
Technical Support: Podpaste
Guest: John Erickson MD, Matthew Clark DO
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, guest bio
7:23 Reflecting on mistakes in medicine
12:50 Background on M&M conferences
13:24: Case from Kashlack Memorial
14:19 Benefits of M&M conferences
20:18 Creating a culture of psychological safety
25:23 Planning M&M conferences, coaching residents on planning M&M conferences
31:40 M&M curriculum for residents
41:17 Quality improvement tools and frameworks
45:05 Navigating difficult conversations
48:30 Structure of M&M
52:23 Turning M&M learning points into systemic change
57:43 Takeaways
Outros
Dream big, teach smarter! In this episode, Dr. Noriko Anderson breaks down how to turn educational dreams into reality using clear goals and purposeful objectives. Learn how frameworks like Bloom’s Taxonomy and Miller’s Pyramid can bring structure, clarity, and joy to your curriculum development process.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer, Script, Cover Art, CME: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Show notes, CME: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Charlotte Chaiklin MD
Hosts, Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Technical Support: Podpaste
Peer Reviewer: Keith Scott Dickerson, MD, MS-BME
Guests: Noriko Anderson, MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio, guest recommendations and favorite failure
Picks of the week
Case #1 from Kashlak Memorial Hospital
Creating goals and objectives
Bloom’s taxonomy
Types of objectives
Miller’s Pyramid
Case #2 from Kashlak Memorial Hospital
Talk with others and ask for help
Take-home points
Outro
Join esteemed guests Dr. Thomas Ciesielski (Washington University in St. Louis) and Dr. Gopal Yadavalli (@BMC_ID, Boston University) as they break down the art and science of negotiation, straight from AIMW25! From mastering the Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument to navigating real-world power dynamics, this episode offers practical strategies to help clinician educators advocate effectively for their programs and learners. Don’t miss this energizing, insight-packed conversation that will level up your leadership game!
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer, Show notes, CME: Molly Heublein MD
Script: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Cover Art, Infographic: Rebecca Garber MD
Hosts, Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Technical Support: Podpaste
Peer Reviewer: Keith Scott Dickerson MD, MS-BME
Guests: Thomas Ciesielski MD. Gopal Yadavalli MD FACP
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Guest one-liner/ Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine AIMW25 reflections
Introduction to Negotiation Preparation
Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument
Interests and Positions
Distributive and Integrative Negotiation
BATNA and ZOPA
Preparing for the meeting
In the meeting itself
How to get better
Outro
Come share insights from AIMW25 with Julie Byington C-TAGME, Ashley Johnson C-TAGME, Samatha Ankireddy MD, and Laura Thompson MD on effective communication and navigating difficult conversations. Understanding our own emotions and personality traits—while being attentive to others’ verbal and non-verbal cues—helps build emotional intelligence and promotes respectful, productive dialogue. Adapting communication styles to different personality types and approaching high-stakes conversations with preparation, psychological safety, and clear follow-up can transform potential conflicts into opportunities for breakthrough.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer, Script, CME: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Show notes, Infographic, Cover Art: Rebecca Garber MD
Hosts, Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Technical Support: Podpaste
Guests: Julie Byington C-TAGME, Ashley Johnson C-TAGME, and Samatha Ankireddy MD and Laura Thompson MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Guest one-liner/ Reflections on AIMW25 conference
Exploring the Crucial Conversation Framework
Learning how to maintain psychological safety
Using tools like the Mint HR Smalley Trent Personality Test to gain personality awareness
Tailoring communication styles based on personality for more productive dialogue and reduced conflict
Skill for being an active listener
Take home points
Outro
In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Chavon Onumah to explore the anti-deficit approach in medical education, emphasizing the importance of recognizing strengths in our learners rather than focusing on perceived shortcomings. We discuss the importance of emotional well-being in healthcare and creating supportive and psychologically safe learning environments and how shifting to an anti-deficit framework in medical education can empower learners, promote a growth mindset, and reduce feelings of imposter syndrome. Dr. Onumah also highlights practical strategies and resources for educators to employ an anti-deficit framework when working with learners.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD,
Hosts, editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Script, show notes, infographics: Karishma Patel MD
Technical Support: Podpaste
Guest: Chavon Onumah, MD, MPH, MEd, FACP
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, guest bio
Advice and emotional well-being in healthcare
9:04 The anti-deficit approach in medical education
Case from Kashlack Memorial
14:52 Deficit vs anti-deficit perspectives
17:47 Role of faculty in supporting students
20:48 Broader implications of anti-deficit frameworks
36:51 Understanding imposter syndrome and stereotype threat
43:34 Fostering a growth mindset in education
44:12 Creating psychological safety for learners
50:29 Institutional strategies for anti-deficit approaches
55:09: Practical resources for educators
1:00:03 Takeaways
Outros
Ready to revive your learner conferences? This powerhouse episode of Curbsiders Teach brings together Dr. Rebecca Garber and Dr. Beth Ward at AIMW25 to share high-yield, practical strategies for transforming didactic sessions into dynamic, must-attend learning experiences. Tune in for inspiring ideas like Pecha Kucha, gamification, and interdisciplinary learning that will energize your teaching toolkit and re-engage your learners!
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer, Show Notes, CME: Molly Heublein, MD
Script, Hosts: Molly Heublein MD, Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Infographic, Cover Art: Charlotte Chaiklin MD
Technical Support: Podpaste
Peer Reviewer: Charlotte Chaiklin MD
Guests: Dr. Rebecca Garber, Dr. Elizabeth (Beth) Ward
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Guest one-liner/ Reflections on AIMW25 conference
Why it is so hard to get learners to come to conference
Why does it matter?
Structural changes to improve conference attendance
Techniques to improve conference delivery
Take home points
Outro
In this episode, Dr. Claxton and Dr. Arnold from “Vital Talk” and share their expertise around providing feedback on communication, best practices for preparing learners for difficult conversations, how to best support trainees as the conversation is unfolding, and strategies for debriefing. We discuss frameworks for sharing communication feedback in a positive, improvement-focused light. This episode will help you understand how to improve learners’ communication skills as well as your own.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Guest one-liner/ Favorite failure
Case from Kashlack Memorial
12:00 Challenges of feedback conversations on communication
15:05 Framing feedback
20:33 Debriefing the communication encounter
25:30 Educator’s role during the encounter
34:55 Preparing the learner / pre-briefing the communication encounter
39:14 Communication frameworks to teach learners
Strategies to teach/give feedback on communication in time-limited settings
47:13 AI in communication teaching
Take home points
Plugs (Vital Talk, Teach Like a Champion)
Outro
Credits
Producer: Molly Heublein MD
Hosts: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Script, show notes: Karishma Patel MD
Technical Support: Podpaste
Peer Reviewer: Jessica Erickson, MD
Guests: Dr. Rene Claxton and Dr. Robert Arnold
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Get inspired by this high-energy recap of AIMW25, where Drs. Vidya Gopinath, Chavon Onumah, Jen Spicer, and Sarah Vick share the most practice-changing pearls from Academic Internal Medicine Week. From rethinking feedback to boosting board pass rates and advancing ambulatory education, this episode is packed with insights every health professions educator can use. Recorded live in New Orleans, it brings the highlights—and the heart—of the conference straight to your ears.
Sorry no CME for this one!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producers, Hosts: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Show notes, Infographic, Cover Art: Molly Heublein, MD, Era Kryzhanovskaya, MD
Guests: Drs. Vidya Gopinath, Sarah Vick, Jen Spicer, and Chavon Onumah
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Join us as we discuss best practices for the feedback conversation and the post-feedback period, with Dr. Liz Petersen and Dr. Reeni Abraham that we had the opportunity to sit down with in person at the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine’s AIMW25. REMAP your feedback conversation by using clinical skills you are already comfortable with from sharing difficult news with patients. These techniques will help guide your learners to success!
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producer, Script, Show Notes, CME: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Hosts, Editors, Cover Art, Infographics: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Guests: Dr. Reeni Abraham, MD; Dr. Liz Petersen, MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Join us as Dr. Erica Johnson, Program Director at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, shares her experiences and best practices for recruitment and retention of a diverse medical workforce. Following the residency’s mission to reflect and serve the broader community guided her to build a residency program that stresses the importance of understanding the history of Baltimore and building trust within that community. You’ll hear tips to help diverse trainees thrive in a ``training program and be inspired to reflect on how to improve recruitment and retention practices in medical education.
Website | Instagram | Twitter | Subscribe | Patreon | CME!| Youtube
thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer
01:08 Guest bio
02:10 Getting to Know Dr. Erica Johnson
05:50 Picks of the Week
08:23 Case from Kashlak
09:50 Recruitment to Reflect Community
12:40 Steward of the Mission: Dr. Johnson’s Approach to Recruitment at Bayview Hopkins
15:33 Defining Diversity
17:29 Opportunities for Improvement in Recruitment
21:05 Leadership team’s approach to highlighting mission and training setting
23:09 Resident Thriving
26:07 Individualized Mentorship
30:09 Holistic Review
32:45 Recruitment and Retention of Faculty
35:23 Importance and Examples of Pathway Programs
38:40 Selfless Service and Aligning Work with Mission
40:20 Importance of Program Director Community
42:48 Take Home Points
44:29 Outro
Credits
Producer, Show Notes, CME: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Infographic, Cover Art: Paige Spata MD
Reviewer: Keith Dickerson, MD
Hosts, Script, Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Guest: Erica Johnson, MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Join us as Dr Ray Bignall (@DrRayMD) delves into the transformative power of mentorship in career development. Learn to cultivate diverse mentor relationships, the importance of genuine connections, and navigating feedback across different identities. Whether you're a mentor or a mentee, this episode is packed with invaluable insights to help you thrive in your professional journey.
Forgive us for taking the opportunity to be mentored by Dr Bignall for the first 20 minutes, if you really want to jump ahead to the case, it starts at 21:33.
Sorry, no CME for this one!
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Advice- slowing down, taking time during training and beyond, saying “not right now”
14:33 Picks of the Week
21:33 Case from Kashlak
22:05 Dr Bignall’s Mentors
29:00 How Dr Bignall Approaches Mentorship/Coaching Trees
36:00 Mentoring across Identify Differences
48:15 Mentoring across Generational Differences
58:01 Helping Mentees Process Feedback
01:03:55 Continuous Improvement for Mentors
01:07:00 Take Home Points
Credits
Producer, show notes: Molly Heublein MD
Infographic, Cover Art: Paige Spata MD
Hosts, Script, Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Guest: O. N. Ray Bignall II, MD, FAAP, FASN
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Join us as Dr Sarah Vick @SVickMD shares practical techniques and frameworks from her workshop at AIMW24 on helping diagnose and treat clinical reasoning gaps in your learners. We break down clinical reasoning into actionable steps; you’ll come away with helpful tips you can take back to clinic or wards next time you are teaching!
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Show Segments
0:00 Intro, disclaimer, guest bio, Picks of the Week
6:48 Case from Kashlack, Defining clinical reasoning
10:42 Pyramid Framework for assessing clinical reasoning skills
16:13 Systems 1 vs system 2 thinking
18:21 Problems with hypothesis generation- diagnosis and treatment
26:16 Problems with premature closure- diagnosis and treatment
28:31 React Framework
29:50 Problem Representation
31:50 IDEA Framework
35:52 Synthesis/Illness Scripts
40:36 Teaching clinical reasoning explicitly
42:54 When to escalate or pass on to next attending
Credits
Script: Era Kryzhanovska MD
Show Notes/CME/Infographic/Cover Art: Molly Heublein MD
Hosts/Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Peer Reviewer: Amit Pahwa, MD
Guest: Sarah Vick MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Join us for a live-recorded episode with the one and only Dr. Kimberly Manning. We cover Dr. Manning’s leadership journey, share practical tips for budding leaders in health professions education with a focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion, and cover how to stay grounded and vulnerable in the process of being a humanistic leader.
Sorry, no CME for this episode!
Website | Instagram | Twitter | Subscribe | Patreon | Youtube
thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Credits
Producers/Hosts/Script: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD; Molly Heublein MD
Show Notes/Infographics: Charlotte Chaiklin MD
Peer Reviewer: Zoe Kopp MD
Guest: Kimberly Manning MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
The start of Dr. Manning’s leadership journey
Humanistic Leadership Tips
Amplification of DEI principles in leadership
Audience Q&A
Take-home points
Listen as our esteemed guest Dr. Stefanie Brown @Dr_B_UMJMHIM (University of Miami) discusses how to successfully lead a residency program through change. Whether you’re looking to gain specific tips on how to navigate the transition to a new scheduling model or development of residency pathways, or just be inspired in your leadership journey, Dr. Brown will leave you with practical tips and ideas.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Picks of the week
Case from Kashlack Memorial Hospital
Dr. Brown’s leadership journey
Residency schedule types
Creating residency pathways
Take-home points
Outro
Credits
Producer/Writer/Show notes/Infographic/Cover Art: Charlotte Chaiklin MD
Hosts, Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Peer Reviewer: Zoe Kopp MD
Guest: Stefanie Brown MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Join us as we discuss all things learner autonomy with returning guest Dr Ben Kinnear. We cover the value of supporting learner autonomy, practical tips for doing this in practice, challenges related to bias in health care and education, and when to let your learners fail to help them grow.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Updates and Introductions
Picks of the Week
Case From Kashlak
Understanding Autonomy and Supervision
Self-Determination Theory and Autonomy
Reflecting on Personal Experiences
Balancing Autonomy with Different Levels of Learners
Autonomy and Risk in Medical Education
Benefits of Learner Autonomy
Challenges in Promoting Autonomy
Promoting Autonomy in the Clinical Setting
Addressing Disparities in Autonomy
Allowing Failure and Reflecting on Autonomy
Framing Autonomy as an Educator Milestone
Promoting Autonomy in Supervisors
Take-home points
Credits
Producers/Hosts: Molly Heublein MD/ Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Writer/Infographic: Molly Heublein MD
Reviewer: Ashwini Niranjan-Azadi MD
Guest: Ben Kinnear MD MEd
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Join us as we discuss responding as a leader when you receive hard to hear feedback with two new guests: Drs. Sall and DeKosky. We cover key points from their respective AIMW24 workshops: “Maintaining PD Wellness: What to Do When the Residents or Faculty are Mad at You,” and “From Whining to Winning: Transforming the Chronic Complainer into a Constructive Champion.” We specifically highlight the emotional valence related to receiving constructive feedback, extreme ownership and radical transparency, tips for chief residents regarding complaints received, and how to maintain a growth mindset when things get spicy in feedback conversations.
Claim CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Show Segments
Intro, disclaimer, guest bio
Updates and Introductions
Dr. Sall and Dr. DeKosky’s workshops
Emotional Valence
Growth Mindset
Psychological Safety
Systems Thinker
Complaint Triage Framework
Seasons of Change
Extreme Ownership
Radical Transparency
Take-home points
Things to Plug
Outro
Credits
Producer/Writer/Infographics/CME: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Hosts: Molly Heublein MD/ Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Reviewer: Ben Kinnear MD, MEd
Guests: Dana Sall, MD MEd; Allison DeKosky, MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Be inspired by Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine Leader, Lisa Willett MD, as we discuss her leadership journey, tips for early career leaders in health professions education, and wisdom to live by as a leader. Push yourself to speak up confidently without arrogance, focus on your mission, and be humble while supporting your team.
This is part of a special 4 episode series we have this season on leadership in academic medicine supported by AAIM!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Lisa Willett, MD is a Professor of Medicine at University of Alabama, Birmingham where she works as a hospitalist and serves as Vice Chair for Education and Faculty Development in the Department of Medicine. She was the past Program Director for 12 years of Tinsley Harrison Internal Medicine program at UAB and has served as past president of APDIM.
Show Segments
0:00 Intro, get to know our guest
7:30 Dr Willett’s Leadership Journey
10:47: Leading through Disruptive Changes
13:56 Values-based Leadership
17:38 Humility and Excellence without Ego
20:26 Tips for Building your Leadership Skills
22:24 Mentorship and observation
26:22 Formal Leadership Training
28:55 There’s never one way to do something
35:23 Getting through difficulty as a Leader
36:33 More Tips for Early-mid Career Leaders
43:46 Take home points
47:46 Outro
Credits
Producer: Molly Heublein MD
Script: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Show notes/infographics/cover art: Molly Heublein MD
Hosts: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD ; Molly Heublein MD
Guest: Lisa Willett MD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic
Learn from the experts about the fundamentals of using AI in health professions education! Drs. Dylan Fortman, Adam Rodman, and Laurah Turner sit down with us to discuss what these models are, concerns to look out for when using these models, and how to integrate them into your teaching. Challenge yourself to explore where AI can take health professions education in the near future!
Claim free CME for this episode at curbsiders.vcuhealth.org!
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thecurbsidersteach@gmail.com
Show Segments
Intro, Disclaimer, Guest Bio
Basic definitions of large language models/artificial intelligence
Using AI in Morning Report
Challenges to using AI in teaching
Bias in AI
Prompting
Precision Education
What’s the future?
Take home points/outro
Credits
Producer/Script: Molly Heublein MD
Infographic/Cover Art/Show Notes: Megan Connor MD
CME Questions: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD
Hosts/Editors: Era Kryzhanovskaya MD, Molly Heublein MD
Peer Reviewer: Michael Caputo DO
Guests: Dylan Fortman MD, Adam Rodman MD, and Laurah Turner PhD
Technical support: Podpaste
Theme Music: MorsyMusic























