Language barriers in medical education and attitudes towards Arabization of medicine: Student and staff perspectives

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Abstract

Students and staff perspectives on language barriers in medical education in Egypt and their attitude towards Arabization of the medical curriculum were explored in a questionnaire survey of 400 medical students and 150 staff members. Many students (56.3%) did not consider learning medicine in English an obstacle, and 44.5% of staff considered it an obstacle only in the 1st year of medical school. Many other barriers to learning other than language were mentioned. However, 44.8% of students translated English terms to Arabic to facilitate studying and 70.6% of students in their clinical study years would prefer to learn patient history-taking in Arabic. While Arabization in general was strongly declined, teaching in Arabic language was suggested as appropriate in some specialties.

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Sabbour, S. M., Dewedar, S. A., & Kandil, S. K. (2010). Language barriers in medical education and attitudes towards Arabization of medicine: Student and staff perspectives. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 16(12), 1263–1271. https://doi.org/10.26719/2010.16.12.1263

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