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University of Exeter Medical School

Dr. Kerry Gilbert

Dr. Kerry Gilbert

Senior Lecturer in Medical Education

 K.G.Gilbert@exeter.ac.uk

 Smeall building JS04

 

Smeall Building, University of Exeter, St Luke's Campus, Heavitree Road, Exeter, EX1 2LU, UK


Overview

Kerry is a Senior Lecturer with a post-graduate education focused role at the University of Exeter Medical School. She is currently leading the development of a new NIHR funded Postgraduate Certificate in Clinical Research Leadership aimed at healthcare professionals involved in the practical research leadership of clinical trial delivery. She is the Curriculum Design and Evaluation Module Lead on the Master's in Clinical Education and is also a techer and moderator on the same course.

Kerry is an Honorary Associate Professor of the Peninsula Medical School, Faculty of Health, University of Plymouth.

Qualifications

  • BSc (Hons) Biochemistry - 1991
  • MSc Cell and Molecular Biology - 1993
  • PhD - 1997
  • Senior Fellowship of the HEA (now Advance HE) - 2016
  • MSc Clinical Education with distinction - 2019

Career

As a medical educator with over 14 years experience, I have a passion for  teaching and learning in its broadest sense. I am currently working within postgraduate medical education in the College of Medicine and Health and have previous experience in undergraduate medicine at Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, where I facilitated learning helping students to develop their approach to learning and learning skills. As the school lead for Enquiry- Based Learning I led the learning discovery curriculum within the Medical School for Medicine, Radiography and Physician Associate courses. I also played a leading role in reordering the BMBS curriculum and wrote the associated Enquiry Based Learning cases, to promote application and transfer of learning to new and authentic patients and contexts.  I was als inaugural co-programme lead for the Foundation Year 0 of the six-year BMBS for which I wrote the curriculum, successfully guiding it through the University approvals process. This bespoke and innovative introduction to medicine is aimed at widening access to medicine for students from unconventional and disadvantaged backgrounds. 
As well as being an innovator in medical education, I have been active in the wider university, whilst at Plymouth, through serving on senate and the teaching learning and quality committee, where I contributed to changing regulations in response to the pandemic to minimize impact on students in terms of learning, assessment and achievement. I have also acted as a panel chair on approvals committees, both internally and for partner institutions in the UK and worldwide.
I support students through being an Academic Tutor, whilst also extending this role for struggling students in terms of remediation and learning skills development. I have also been a pastoral tutor, attending to the wider needs of students, which was particularly important during the pandemic as students struggled to adapt to learning through lockdown and not meeting their peers and tutors face to face.
My research and scholarship areas include: How do students learn: Threshold Concepts in PBL; Barriers and Enablers to Student Learning following the Transition from School; How do Concept Maps Improve Understanding in an Integrated Medical Curriculum; Using Parallel Cases to Improve Learning Transfer between Clinical Scenarios. 
I have a background as a Research Fellow at the University of Bristol, where my interest in my own learning led me to pursue a career in education, following a lifelong passion to ensure that potential is unlocked in every individual, to help them follow their dreams and make an impact in their chosen field. 

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Research

Research interests

Kerry has a keen interest in how students learn, particularly in terms of developing educational packages that appeal to broad groups of students, who may have different educational experience and needs. Her research has investigated and evaluated how students move from being consumers of teaching to adult learners with self-efficacy and the desire and ability to appropriately guide their own learning.

Kerry has used her experience in understanding learning to re-develop and re-write the Enquiry-Based Learning curriculum and cases at the University of Plymouth Peninsula Medical School to better reflect current educational thinking.

Kerry has a keen interest in educational relationships and has studied how mentorship in learning contexts can improve learning development for individual students. She has also researched and published on Threshold Concepts in learning in terms of development of understanding and transfer and application of knowledge to new scenarios and contexts, particularly with respect to learning to think like a doctor.

Research projects

  • PGCert Leading Clinical Research Delivery Programme Design and Leadership.

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Publications

Journal articles

Gilbert K (2023). Learning journeys – student learning development in the first years of a medical degree: an analysis of student conversations. Frontiers in Sociology, 8 Abstract.
Burr S, Martin T, Edwards J, Ferguson C, Gilbert K, Gray C, Hill A, Hosking J, Johnstone K, Kisielewska J, et al (2021). Standard setting anchor statements: a double cross-over trial of two different methods. MedEdPublish, 10(1).
Neve H, Bull S, Lloyd H, Gilbert K, Mattick K (2018). Evaluation of an innovative, evidence-guided, PBL approach. Clin Teach, 15(2), 156-162. Abstract.  Author URL.
Sales E, Kanhonou R, Baixauli C, Giner A, Cooke D, Gilbert K, Arrillaga I, Segura J, Ros R (2006). Sowing date, transplanting, plant density and nitrogen fertilization affect indigo production from Isatis species in a Mediterranean region of Spain. Industrial Crops and Products, 23(1), 29-39. Abstract.
Gilbert KG, Maule HG, Rudolph B, Lewis M, Vandenburg H, Sales E, Tozzi S, Cooke DT (2004). Quantitative analysis of indigo and indigo precursors in leaves of Isatis spp. and Polygonum tinctorium. Biotechnology Progress, 20(4), 1289-1292. Abstract.
Angelini LG, Campeol E, Tozzi S, Gilbert KG, Cooke DT, John P (2003). A New HPLC-ELSD Method to Quantify Indican in Polygonum tinctorium L. and to Evaluate β-Glucosidase Hydrolysis of Indican for Indigo Production. Biotechnology Progress, 19(6), 1792-1797. Abstract.
Gilbert KG, Garton S, Karam MA, Arnold GM, Karp A, Edwards KJ, Cooke DT, Barker JHA (2002). A high degree of genetic diversity is revealed in Isatis spp. (dyer's woad) by amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP). Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 104(6-7), 1150-1156. Abstract.
Gilbert KG, Cooke DT (2001). Dyes from plants: Past usage, present understanding and potential. Plant Growth Regulation, 34(1), 57-69. Abstract.
Gilbert KG, Hill DJ, Crespo C, Mas A, Lewis M, Rudolph B, Cooke DT (2000). Qualitative analysis of indigo precursors from woad by HPLC and HPLC-MS. PHYTOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS, 11(1), 18-20.  Author URL.
Gilbert KG, Hill DJ, Crespo C, Mas A, Lewis M, Rudolph B, Cooke DT (2000). Qualitative analysis of indigo precursors from woad by HPLC and HPLC-MS. Phytochemical Analysis, 11(1), 18-20. Abstract.
Stoker KG, Cooke DT, Hill DJ (1998). An improved method for the large-scale processing of woad (Isatis tinctoria) for possible commercial production of woad indigo. Journal of Agricultural and Engineering Research, 71(4), 315-320. Abstract.
Stoker KG, Cooke DT, Hill DJ (1998). Influence of light on natural indigo production from woad (Isatis tinctoria). Plant Growth Regulation, 25(3), 181-185. Abstract.

Chapters

Neve H, Gilbert K, Lloyd H (2019). PBL AS LEARNING VEHICLE, THRESHOLD CONCEPT OR CAPABILITY?: Audio-Diary Research in Medical Education. In  (Ed) Threshold Concepts in Problem-based Learning, 49-64.
Gilbert KG (2016). Dyes. In  (Ed) Encyclopedia of Applied Plant Sciences, 368-373. Abstract.

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