Introduction: Across higher education, curriculum mapping has attracted great interest, partly driven by the need to map graduate competencies to learning and assessment for quality assurance and accreditation. Other drivers have included the need to: a) provide tools for curriculum design and renewal, b) improve communication amongst teachers and curriculum developers and c) support learning by informing students about the scope and sequence of their programs. Those embarking on curriculum mapping have sought clarification about what elements of the curriculum should be mapped, how to develop their own map or whether they should adopt externally available products. During our combined experience of mapping six different medical programs over the course of 15 years, we have frequently sought answers to these questions. However, due to the many and varying types of curriculum maps and curriculum-mapping processes that are described in the literature, answers have not been readily forthcoming.
CITATION STYLE
Watson, E. G. S., Steketee, C., Mansfield, K., Moore, M., Dalziel, B., Damodaran, A., … Hu, W. (2020). Curriculum mapping for health professions education: a typology. Focus on Health Professional Education: A Multi-Professional Journal, 21(1), 91. https://doi.org/10.11157/fohpe.v21i1.364
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