Teaching

The Department of Clinical Medicine is involved in several education programs at Aarhus University. The vast majority is made up of the Master's degree program in medicine, where the department has primary responsibility for ensuring the framework for teaching. The education program emphasizes, among other things, that students participate to a large extent in the work of the hospital departments. In addition, emphasis is placed on several hospitals being involved in the education, so that researchers at the regional hospitals also teach the medical students.

The department is also the main provider of courses in the Master's degree program in Molecular Medicine and the Master's degree program in Optometry and Vision Science.

In addition, the department contributes to a number of teaching elements within the education programs:

The Bachelor's degree program in medicine, where the department is responsible for contributions within health psychology and communication to the course Theory of Science, Health Psychology and Communication (1st semester), Early Clinics in connection with Functional Anatomy and Histology (2nd semester) and the course Pathology (6th semester).

The Master's degree program in Biomedical Engineering/Biomedical Technology, where the department is responsible for several of the courses.

The Master's degree program in Molecular Nutrition & Food Technology, where the department is also responsible for several of the courses.

Instructions

Good to know

 

  • Copyright (in Danish)- when you use material from others or material with data about patients in your teaching, you must be aware of copyright.
  • WAYF (Where Are Your From)

Facilities when you are going to teach

The hospitals are obliged to provide the necessary teaching facilities. This also includes facilities for skills training with up-to-date equipment and technical service. Equipment in skills laboratories (e.g. phantoms and other simulation equipment) is provided by Aarhus University.

It can be agreed in more detail that equipment can be used both in undergraduate education and by hospital employees.