Dunedin BSE Course

Dunedin BSE Course Postgraduate courses in Dunedin, New Zealand revise relevant topics in anatomy, physiology and patho

This annual postgraduate course in Dunedin, New Zealand revises relevant topics in anatomy, physiology and pathology (including immunology, microbiology, pharmacology & statistics). A 5 week course for candidates taking the FRACS Surgical Sciences Examination

Amendment to August course dates:7th to 25th August, with labs 12, 19 and 20 August.  Register at
08/03/2023

Amendment to August course dates:
7th to 25th August, with labs 12, 19 and 20 August. Register at

NEXT COURSES: 8 – 26 May 2023 (concludes Friday) and 7-25 August (concludes Friday) Note: There are weekend labs Applications now open. Venue is the Dunedin Leisure Lodge where a discounted bed and breakfast rate is offered for the duration of the course. Please apply as soon as you can as numbers...

2023 courses to prepare for the GSSE exams:There will be a course running 8-26 May for the June exam and a second course...
08/03/2023

2023 courses to prepare for the GSSE exams:
There will be a course running 8-26 May for the June exam and a second course 7-25 August for the October exam.
These are residential courses at Leisure Lodge, Dunedin. Three anatomy practicals will take place at the University on weekends during the course. Places are limited. See our website: https://www.dunedincourse.ac.nz/about/ for more details.

The Dunedin Basic Medical Sciences Course provides an overview of the relevant material in the FRACS and mock exams for preparation.

23/02/2023

May course anatomy labs are:
Sat 13 May
Sat 20 May
Sun 21 May

Course finishes Friday 26th at 5pm

In August, labs are 12, 19 and 26 August

2023 courses to prepare for the GSSE exams:There will be a course running 8-26 May for the June exam and a second course...
11/11/2022

2023 courses to prepare for the GSSE exams:
There will be a course running 8-26 May for the June exam and a second course 7-26 August for the October exam.
These are residential courses at Leisure Lodge, Dunedin. Three anatomy practicals will take place at the University on weekends during the course. Places are limited. See our website: https://www.dunedincourse.ac.nz/about/ for more details.

The Dunedin Basic Medical Sciences Course provides an overview of the relevant material in the FRACS and mock exams for preparation.

17/10/2022

2023 courses to prepare for the GSSE exams:

There will be a course running 8-27 May for the June exam and a second course 7-26 August for the October exam.

These are residential courses at Leisure Lodge, Dunedin. Three anatomy practicals will take place at the University on Saturdays during the course.

Information will follow

To aspiring surgeons,  the College has changed criteria to be accepted into specialty programmes:  "All specialty traini...
31/03/2022

To aspiring surgeons, the College has changed criteria to be accepted into specialty programmes: "All specialty training boards have introduced the successful completion of the GSSE as a mandatory eligibility requirement for application to SET". Here is the link to the junior doctors site: http://jdocs.surgeons.org/clinical-workplace

Directors of clinical training, supervisors and medical education officers can use the JDocs Framework as a tool to support assessment of the junior doctor's progress against the relevant learning outcomes and expected levels of competency. It can also be useful in identifying gaps in learning and t...

Registrations for the 2022 course close 6 April 2022.  Please apply at: https://www.dunedincourse.ac.nz/
27/03/2022

Registrations for the 2022 course close 6 April 2022. Please apply at: https://www.dunedincourse.ac.nz/

Dunedin Basic Medical Sciences Course revises relevant topics in anatomy, physiology & pathology in preparation for Surgical Sciences & Clinical Exams.

23/03/2022

Hi candidates registered in the 2022 course. Venue is the Dunedin Leisure Lodge, 30 Duke Street, Dunedin

27/01/2022

Congratulations to Jasmine Chew who has been awarded the Sandy Smith Monetary Prize in Microbiology (top microbiology student 2021).
Sponsored by the Dunedin Basic Medical Sciences Course.

Dunedin BSE Course 20222nd May - 3rd June, 2022Or Website (www.dunedincourse.ac.nz has now been uploaded with details an...
12/10/2021

Dunedin BSE Course 2022
2nd May - 3rd June, 2022
Or Website (www.dunedincourse.ac.nz has now been uploaded with details and application form available)

Dunedin Basic Medical Sciences Course revises relevant topics in anatomy, physiology & pathology in preparation for Surgical Sciences & Clinical Exams.

Congratulations to Dr Latika Samalia on her achievement.  Latika has taught Anatomy on our BSE Course for many years,inc...
23/09/2021

Congratulations to Dr Latika Samalia on her achievement. Latika has taught Anatomy on our BSE Course for many years,including Anatomy Dissection.

The secret to teaching is fun.

Dr Latika Samalia, of the Department of Anatomy, is the Ako Aotearoa Prime Minister's Supreme Award winner for 2021. The award comes on top of her Sustained Excellence Award and the Supporting Pacific Learners endorsement announced in August. The secret, she says, is having fun.

In a laboratory full of human cadavers, Anatomy Lecturer Dr Latika Samalia will sense when it’s time to tell one of her stories.

She’s famous for these humorous anecdotes which act as a reset in this daunting learning environment.

“I don't know where they come from, but they just come out,” she laughs.

Dr Samalia can’t quite recall when she introduced the stories, or her super-popular class quizzes, or the “friendly banter time” inserted as a break from the dissections and intensive learning.

But they all form part of a unique teaching style which has evolved over a 28-year career in Otago’s Department of Anatomy.

“The aim of being a teacher is to make sure that your students have learned something from you every day. It doesn't matter if they learn only one thing. You have to make the environment friendly and happy, and less daunting yet respectable, then they will remember things. Otherwise, you're wasting your time.”

That ability to connect with and inspire students has now been recognised with a national Tertiary Teaching Excellence Award acknowledging Dr Samalia’s sustained excellence. Her award was complemented by an endorsement for ‘Excellence in Supporting Pacific Learners’.

“I couldn't do it on my own. I have very good colleagues, department and students so they push me along and allow me to do what I do,” she says.

Anatomy Head of Department Professor Lisa Matisoo-Smith describes Dr Samalia a “rock star of medical education”, and consistently excellent student feedback notes her empathy and ability to maintain a stimulating and enjoyable learning environment.

“Latika never fails to make everyone laugh and smile and get excited about anatomy. I often find anatomy overwhelming but she breaks it down so, you’re like ‘oh what was I so stressed about’. Her enthusiasm brushes off on us students,” one student wrote.

Originally from Fiji, Dr Samalia trained as a doctor and worked as an obstetrician and gynaecologist before making the switch to teaching.

She now teaches up to 750 students in some weeks in 5 papers across a number of undergraduate and postgraduate clinical courses, passing on her knowledge of anatomical structures and clinical skills to future health professionals.

Dr Samalia has a strong focus on Pacific students and was instrumental in developing orientation sessions for Pacific and Māori students.

She credits her parents, who were both schoolteachers and “very community-minded” with inspiring a teaching approach which prioritises the individual even in big classes of 75 students.

“Students can get lost in a huge class and sometimes it becomes hard for them to deal with their emotions. So, I take them individually into the lab to get them used to the environment, and many times I have had students come back and say, ‘If you didn't do what you did to help, I would not be doing medicine’.

“The aim of being a teacher is to make sure that your students have learned something from you every day. It doesn't matter if they learn only one thing. You have to make the environment friendly and happy, and less daunting yet respectable, then they will remember things. Otherwise, you're wasting your time.

“I'm very happy with what I do and I tell the students that you need to have fun in whatever you do. If you think that medicine or dentistry or whatever course you're doing is making you unhappy then it’s time to change. You live only once and you’ve got to do something that you have fun in.”

20/09/2021

At this stage the Dunedin BSE Course will run from Monday 2nd May - Friday June 3rd, 2022

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Dunedin School Of Medicine
Dunedin
9054

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