ArchivesCategory: Uncategorized

17Sep

Dear Arts Practica community, Long time, friends. It’s been wild, abundant, and blessedly educational over here, to say the least. I’m so very glad to be writing to you today to let you know about an upcoming workshop: Aesthetic Attention: Art and Clinical Skills November 13-14 in Boston, MA. Here are the basics: Two-day intensive, […]Continue Reading

18Nov

Ok folks, I’m doing it. I’m stepping out of the postpartum cocoon. The New England Museum Association annual meeting starts tomorrow, and, excitingly, its focus is on museums and healthcare.  It’s a brave, provocative, data-listening choice on NEMA’s part to prioritize audiences in healthcare for this year’s theme. The trend of interactions between healthcare organizations […]Continue Reading

24Mar

Greetings! Long time! And new educational offering alert! After a year of providing distance learning classes by request, I am proud to announce that ArtsPractica will offer its first proper distance learning course this summer! Yeah! Will you take this 90 second survey to help me gauge interest? And could you share it with colleagues who are […]Continue Reading

27Aug

…That time is now. As someone deeply concerned with educational issues related to medical misdiagnosis, I always have my eye out for examples of logical thinking gone astray. A couple of weeks ago, one showed up in the New York Times, delivering with it one whopper of a judgment to the arts—and especially to art […]Continue Reading

24Jun

Hi friends and colleagues, I’m excited to announce my upcoming workshop: The Art Practicum: Seeing in Uncertainty A Trans-professional Workshop for Clinicians and Science Educators Friday, October 25 (6-8pm), and Saturday, October 26 (8am – 3pm), 2013 Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University An Art Practicum workshop with Boston Medical Center clinicians Art, science, and clinical […]Continue Reading

13Jun

“The most commonly missed fracture in emergency medicine is the second one.” -Pat Croskerry, MD, PhD   Croskerry’s research describes many types of cognitive pitfalls in medicine. Many of them have to do with how we perform in a state of search. Failing to notice a patient’s second fracture is one such type, known as […]Continue Reading

16Apr

“When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, ‘look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.’” – Fred Rogers When I saw that quote earlier today on Facebook, I was immediately grateful for it as a parent. My hope […]Continue Reading

15Feb

What does it mean to really see a patient? This question drives the work of ArtsPractica, a medical education consultancy dedicated to improving the skills of diagnosis with arts learning. I have explored this question in collaboration with expert diagnosticians and in the arts. Seeing is about longitudinal skill development, multiple perspectives, suspending judgement, and metacognition. It is more […]Continue Reading

09Jan

“Let the familiar become strange and the strange familiar — the two rules of creativity.” –Sam Keen, 1991   One of my best collaborators in the work of art-viewing lives with extreme visual impairment. One of the things I appreciate about working with him is the renewed sense of focus on what the work is […]Continue Reading

02Jan

I kicked off 2013 with a new tradition for Arts Practica – New Years cards! I created them in gratitude to friends and colleagues making the world better – and then sent them all over that very world. I chose this quote by Einstein to share because I love it so: I love it because […]Continue Reading

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