Conferences
Educational conferences include Acute Care Symposium, Academic Half-Day, Morning Report, Children’s Grand Rounds, Resident Grand Rounds, Practice-Based Learning, Evidence-Based Medicine, Global Health, Residents as Teachers and additional specialty conferences.
Sample Inpatient Conference Schedule
Time |
Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
Thursday |
Friday |
8-9AM |
Morning Report |
Morning Report |
Children’s Grand Rounds |
Resident Grand Rounds |
Morning Report |
Sample Academic Half-Day Schedule (during Y weeks)
Time |
Session |
09:45-10:30AM |
Lecture 1 |
10:30-11:15AM |
Lecture 2 |
11:15-12:00PM |
Lecture 3 |
Acute Care Symposium is held each July to provide house staff with quick tips and management pearls for clinical scenarios they are likely to encounter during residency and beyond. These lectures provide attendees an opportunity to learn up-to-date acute management skills.
Academic Half-Day is a lecture series given by both faculty and fellows and covers major topics in pediatrics. The curriculum also includes other important topics such as: implicit bias and bystander-to-upstander training, global health, ethics, quality improvement, professionalism, Residents as Teachers, and Meaning in Medicine.
Children’s Grand Rounds: Children’s Grand Rounds are held on Wednesday mornings and draw nationally recognized experts to discuss updates and advances in their areas of expertise. Once a quarter, residents present interesting patient cases to the hospital faculty and staff at our "Case of the Quarter.”
Resident Grand Rounds are held on Thursday mornings and involve an interactive case-based discussion presented by a resident and moderated by faculty. A faculty member or fellow then provides a "wrap talk" on the diagnosis with clinical pearls.
Core Curriculum is a lecture series given by both faculty and fellows that covers major topics in pediatrics. The curriculum also includes other important topics such as: implicit bias and bystander to upstander training, global health, ethics, quality improvement, professionalism, residents as teachers, and meaning in medicine.
- Implicit Bias and Bystander to Upstander training is part of the residency longitudinal diversity curriculum, where residents learn about how to face and address microaggressions, and to be better advocates for their patients and themselves by learning socially-conscious care and how to be upstanders.
- Global Health Curriculum covers major global health topics. These lectures are given by faculty members with global health experience and guest lecturers with knowledge in the wide spectrum of global diseases.
- Quality Improvement encompasses the fundamental principles of QI and is accompanied by a hands-on workshop where residents apply these concepts. The QI curriculum prepares residents for participation in an annual residency-wide QI project. Many residents also choose to participate in smaller group-based QI projects within the CHOA system and have even developed their own independent projects.
- Meaning in Medicine is part of our longitudinal faculty and resident group mentorship program, where residents from all years are matched with faculty mentors to discuss the aspects of medicine that make our work meaningful and fulfilling.
Practice Based Learning (PBL) conferences provide housestaff with an opportunity to review and present a focused topic directly related to a patient’s care. All residents will present at least three PBL conferences during their training, focusing on a particular clinical or management problem they encountered during their Night Team months. The resident will review the literature and present a discussion using the known published data. Faculty provide feedback and discussion related to the clinical topics presented.