Problem-based learning was incorporated into many medical schools across Europe motivated by the belief that it would improve medical students’ problem-solving skills (Reference Norman and SchmidtNorman & Schmidt, 2000). Knowledge in psychiatry changes rapidly and by the time the students graduate, many are already behind in the latest developments. Thus the primary goal of problem-based learning is to prepare students to be lifelong learners and practical problem-solvers.
In problem-based learning, learning takes place in the context of cases. But whose gaze has divined these problems and produced the cases? We create problems based on our own experiences, usually shaped by traditional learning (lack of prepared materials is another problem). So then how do pre-shaped psychiatric problems help medical students learn to frame experience for themselves?
Another potential problem with problem-based learning is its relative inefficiency; some research suggests that problem-based learning curricula cover about 80% of what might be accomplished in a traditional curriculum in the same period (Reference Albanese and MitchellAlbanese & Mitchell, 1993).
Problem-based learning assumes that students already are good problem-solvers, whereas it may be a skill they need to develop or improve. Simply asking students to work in groups does not necessarily develop good group-working skills. Further, some students are less capable (or less keen) to be actively involved in the learning activities, which affects the whole collaborative effort. And finally, in problem-based learning students may be deprived access to a particularly inspirational or charismatic professor who could attract young people to psychiatry and who in a traditional curriculum would deliver lectures to a large group.
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