Registration Deadline: 2025 Knowledge Synthesis Workshop
May 1, 2025
Location
University of Illinois Chicago, College of Medicine
Address
808 S Wood Street, Chicago, IL 60612
Calendar
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Join Us for an Immersive, 3.5-Day Workshop Designed to Elevate Your Expertise in Knowledge Synthesis and Knowledge Translation!
This workshop is specifically crafted for educators, graduate students, researchers, librarians, and health professionals who are ready to gain cutting-edge skills in knowledge synthesis for effective knowledge translation. Over the course of 3.5 days, you’ll receive personalized guidance from expert faculty and have opportunities for hands-on experience to help you master the critical elements of this essential process. This workshop is a chance to enhance your knowledge synthesis skills in a collaborative environment, network with like-minded professionals, and leave equipped with the tools you need to make a tangible impact.
June 16-19, 2025 from 8:30-4:30 each day
Registration Details
Registration includes all materials, coffee breaks, lunches, and a team dinner. Registration is limited to 24 participants to ensure hands-on time with expert faculty.
$2,205 with early bird registration before March 5, 2025
$2,450 with registration after March 5, 2025
The deadline for registration is May 1, 2025
Date posted
Feb 5, 2025
Date updated
Feb 5, 2025
Meet the Faculty Heading link
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H. Carrie Chen, MD PhD
Dr. H. Carrie Chen is a pediatrician, Professor of Health Systems Science, and the Associate Dean for Medical Education Research and Scholarship at the Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine. Her work has focused on workplace-based learning and assessment, entrustable professional activities as a competency-based education framework, and trust and equity in the learning environment. She also serves as an Associate Editor for Advances in Health Sciences Education and previously co-led with Arianne Teherani, one of the Best Evidence in Medical Education Coordinating Centers, globally known for developing synthesis methods for best evidence for health professions education. She has helped deliver faculty development internationally and across multiple health professions to support others in their ability to advance excellence in health professions education through scholarship and innovation.
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Michael Gottlieb, MD
Dr. Michael Gottlieb is a Professor of Emergency Medicine and Vice Chair of Research at Rush University Medical Center. He co-created the Academic Life in Emergency Medicine (ALiEM) Faculty Incubator and is the Director of Learner Assessment and Program Evaluation for the SAEM Advanced Research Methodology Evaluation and Design in Medical Education program. He has authored over 600 peer-reviewed publications and received over $20 million in grant funding. He is an editor for nine journals, with a specialized focus in evidence synthesis, including systematic and scoping reviews.
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Renate Kahlke, PhD
Dr. Renate Kahlke is Assistant Professor of Medicine and Scientist at the McMaster Education Research, Innovation and Theory Centre at McMaster University. Her work seeks to explore the impact of social and organizational systems on changemaking among healthcare professionals and trainees. She has significant expertise in qualitative knowledge syntheses. She has extensively used and published methodological guidance on critical/narrative reviews. She has also engaged with qualitative integrative reviews, including a complex a methodological review synthesizing the literature on diverse qualitative research interview approaches across multiple fields. Dr. Kahlke holds grants from across major funding agencies, including recognition for her integrative review work at the Society of Directors of Research in Medical Education.
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Lauren Maggio, PhD MS(LIS)
Dr. Lauren Maggio is Professor of Medical Education at the University of Illinois Chicago College of Medicine and the Director of Research for the Department of Medical Education. Trained as a medical librarian, Lauren blends her background in information science and doctorate in medical education to conduct research exploring the creation, dissemination, and use of medical information. Lauren has led multiple knowledge syntheses using a variety of methodologies, which have been published in Academic Medicine, Medical Education, and Perspectives on Medical Education. She currently serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the journal MedEdPORTAL.
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Karen Mattick, PhD
Dr. Karen Mattick is Professor of Medical Education at the University of Exeter in South West England and leads a Health Professions Education & Wellbeing research group. The research projects she has been involved in have often involved evidence syntheses, including realist syntheses (e.g. the IMPACT realist review, Care Under Pressure 1 and Care Under Pressure 2). Karen is also President of the Association for the Study of Medical Education, Deputy Editor for the journal Medical Education, and Member of the NIHR Health and Social Care Delivery Research (HSDR) Funding Committee. Her work has been recognized through various awards, such as ASME President’s Medal winner 2022 and Honorary Fellow of the Academy of Medical Educators.
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Arianne Teherani, PhD
Dr. Arianne Teherani is Professor of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine. She is the Founding Co-Director of the University of California, Center for Climate Health and Equity, and Director for Program Evaluation and Education Continuous Quality Improvement for the School of Medicine. Arianne’s research advances equity, social justice, and climate solutions in health sciences education. She has served and led leadership roles in multiple organizations, including the Association of American Medical Colleges, the American Educational Research Association, and the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. For a decade Arianne served as Deputy Editor for the Journal of General Internal Medicine (JGIM). hanShe served as Associate Editor for the “Climate Change and Health Education” special issue of Frontiers in Public Health. Arianne co-led, with Carrie Chen, the Best Evidence in Medical Education Coordinating Center, one of the International Association for Health Professions Education’s sixteen globally recognized centers known for developing synthesis methods for best evidence for health professions education. Arianne’s research has been featured in venues such as National Public Radio, KTVU, Market Watch, and the Huffington Post. Arianne mentors scholars worldwide to lead impactful, translation-ready work in the educational and social sciences within health.
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Aliki Thomas, PhD OT(C)
Dr. Aliki Thomas is an occupational therapist, Associate Professor in the School of Physical Occupational Therapy (SPOT), cross appointed scientist at McGill’s Institute of Health Sciences Education (IHSE) and researcher at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Rehabilitation. She holds a Canada Research Chair in Education, Practice and Policy for Evidence-Based Healthcare and leads an internationally recognized research program that addresses the underutilization of scientific findings in practice. The goal of her research is to bring key stakeholders from education, practice and health policy to synergistically co-develop, implement, and test innovative strategies that will lead to equitable, person-centred, and evidence-informed rehabilitation services.