1: Setting the scene
2: Carrying baggage
3: Moving on after failure
4: Reframing anxiety
5: Confidence and self-belief
6: Understanding OSCE construction
7: Forming a connection
8: Rehearsal
9: Studying in a group
10: Modelling
11: Build your Skills Toolkit - Part 1: Getting started
12: Build your Skills Toolkit - Part 2: General aspects
13: Build your Skills Toolkit - Part 3: History taking
14: Build your Skills Toolkit - Part 4: Practical skills
15: Build your Skills Toolkit - Part 5: Challenging scenarios
16: Generic strategies
17: Afterword
Highly commended at the BMA Medical Book Awards 2015
Duncan Harding is a trained forensic psychiatrist with a research
interest in the neurobiology of psychopathy and conduct disorder.
He has published extensively in the field of motoneurone
degeneration, and is also interested in recovery, peer mentorship,
and medical education. His teaching focuses on the OSCE: he
facilitates OSCE workshops for trainees and medical students;
delivers lectures on the MRCPsych teaching course for trainees at
the Institute of
Psychiatry; and is currently designing a strategic generic
skills-based OSCE course for the UK and overseas.
Coping with the fear of, or, actual exam failure is always the
footnote of any exam preperation books, never giving it the
recognition it derserves. Harding has tackled this taboo, by
producing a straightforward, highly readable plan on how not to be
subsumed by these feelings when preparing for OSCE examination...I
can't recommend this book enough to trainees, tutors, training
directors, and revision course organisers.
*Amazon*
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