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Commentary

The ELEPHANT criteria in medical education: Can medical education be fun?

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Pages 195-197 | Published online: 10 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

‘Hilarity and a good nature [and] a breezy cheerfulness help enormously in the study and in the practice of medicine,’ said Sir William Osler, Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford, pioneering medical educationalist, and arguably one of the greatest physicians of all time (Osler W. Citation). We present evidence that (1) Encouraging Learning, (2) Entertaining People, and (3) Having a Nice Time are dangerously powerful adjuncts to medical education. These are, by acronym, the ELEPHANT criteria. Encouraging is the motivating heart of the matter. Entertainment engages the mind and has been shown to enhance working memory and recall. Enjoyment is associated with deep learning, which comes with a whole host of benefits. However, learning in fear and misery can be an effective tool – but for other reasons – and the pessimistic personality type may respond badly to ‘fun learning.’ Even so, medical education that fulfills the ELEPHANT criteria can be an effective tool in training young doctors.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Aravinthan Varatharaj

ARAVINTHAN VARATHARAJ and HUGH GIFFORD are final year medical students at the University of Oxford. The ideas put forward in this article were first presented at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE) in Malaga, Spain. Hugh Gifford may, or may not, have been wearing an elephant costume.

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