Posts Tagged nurse

Continued Medical Education (CME)

Looking for ways to expand your medical career? Perhaps enrolling in one of many Continued Medical Education (CME) schools may present a way for medical professionals, doctors, nurses, dentists, therapists, and the like, to keep abreast of new developments in a particular field of practice.

CME studies provide practitioners the opportunity to study pathophysiology (physical and functional changes due to illness or injury), etiology (origins of disease), diagnostic techniques, modes of therapy, etc. CME programs may offer courses on topics ranging from genomics (the study of genetic sequencing, DNA, and chromosomes) to progressive technique applications.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Creating a Democratic Learning Community

is the focus of a new book by Sam Chaltain, National Director of the Forum for Education and Democracy. Sam previously worked with the First Amendment Schools Project, an experience that helped shaped this book. He is also founding director of the Five Freedoms Project, which is a community educators, students and citizens committed to First Amendment Freedoms, democratic schools, and the idea that students should be seen and heard (and of which I am a member).

American Schools: The Art of Creating a Democratic Learning Community has a Foreword by former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor – herself long committed to a revitalization of civic education – and is valuable both as something to read to provoke one’s thinking, and as a resource for further exploration of the topic, especially for anyone concerned about preparing our students to learn to be citizens of a democracy.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts