July 20, 2005
Medical College of Georgia
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Contact Us:

Department of Medical Illustration
Medical College of Georgia
1120 15th Street, CJ1101
Augusta, GA 30912-0300
Phone: 706-721-3266
Fax: 706-721-7855
E-mail: medart@mcg.edu

Department Chairman and
Associate Professor Steven J. Harrison sharriso@mcg.edu

Education Coordinator and
Assistant Professor Wm. M. Andrews bandrews@mcg.edu

Admissions Coordinator and
Assistant Professor Andrew Swift aswift@mcg.edu

Assistant Professor John Foerster jfoerster@mcg.edu

Administration Specialist Joyce Mentel
jmentel@mcg.edu

 

Illustration Credits:

"Internal Inguinal Ring"
by James Smith, Class of 2000
Graphite Pencil

"Sarcomere"
by Robert Finkbeiner, Class of 1994
Digital

 

 

Curriculum
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Composite artwork: background image "Internal Inguinal Ring" by James Smith, Class of 2000, rendered in graphite pencil; overlay image "Sarcomere" by Robert Finkbeiner, Class of 1994, rendered digitally.
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This page presents basic information about the curriculum of the Medical Illustration Graduate Program, our teaching philosophy and educational goals.

The educational goals of the Medical Illustration Graduate Program are as follows:

  • To refine students' expertise in various artistic media.
  • To provide the scientific foundation necessary to prepare illustrations in a medical setting
  • To teach students to visually problem-solve
  • To establish and meet educational and communication objectives
  • To offer extensive practical experience in medical illustration

The educational philosophy of the Medical Illustation Graduate Program is as follows:

The Department of Medical Illustration supports the beliefs of the Medical College of Georgia and accepts the responsibility to its students, faculty, employees and the people of Georgia for excellence in education.

The Program is centered around the belief that its graduates must possess advanced artistic skills and a thorough knowledge of the human body in order to accurately interpret medical and other bio-scientific information. It is the faculty's belief that the students should spend a majority of their time in the art studio perfecting their skills and talents as artists. Emphasis is on problem solving: the creative interpretation of visual information that is not only clear and accurate, but also appropriate for its stated need and intended use. The faculty believes it must challenge each student to work toward the maximum limit of his or her individual creative potential.

This statement receives further credence by the following beliefs held by the Program's faculty.

The activities required of the students are not done because "they've always been done." The Program is based on the premise that all of its activities will have relevance to the students' future professional lives.

The curriculum does not require all of the students to engage in the same assignments, but allows considerable latitude in choosing among options. The faculty believes education involves making decisions and that students must be given a chance to learn how to make such decisions while in school.

Because the faculty believes the students' assignments must have a direct relationship to what professional medical illustrators are doing, the curriculum requires its students, not the professors, to do the reading, the writing and the thinking (the problem solving). The curriculum is directed toward question asking and problem solving rather than rote memorization.

Because it is believed that students learn from people and problems outside the program, its curriculum includes resources from the professional community.

Throughout its history, the Program has tried to maintain a flexible curriculum, emphasizing the fundamentals of art and design. We believe that a combination of traditional methods and contemporary applications are to be sought. Today we are incorporating computer generated art into our creative media, believing that digital techniques are integral to our industry. The curriculum design attempts to describe what the students are expected to learn and how they are expected to demonstrate that learning. It tries to avoid the danger of students being uncertain about how they will be judged. Testing develops from what is taught and not from what the students are assumed to know.

Faculty in the department have chosen to adopt a non-authoritative role, moving away from an adversarial relationship between professor and student toward collaborative effort. Students are given opportunities to supervise themselves, giving them a degree of control in the functioning of the Program.

The Program's concept of knowledge, attitudes and skills is oriented toward the future. This does not mean that knowledge of the past is not useful. It means that the Program attempts to realistically assess what students will need to know in the years ahead, in order to help them learn those things.

Professors must view themselves as learners. This idea develops a learning community where the professor functions as a coordinator or facilitator of activities rather than as a dictator.

In addition to formal teaching, the faculty recognizes that students also learn from other students, and that students who function as teachers learn more than students functioning only as students.

Students are not placed in competitive roles with each other, but function instead in collaborative relationships. The Program strives to achieve a positive and supportive atmosphere in which each member is encouraged to grow in his/her own way, but not at the expense of someone else.

The studio/classroom environment should be characterized by physical comfort, mutual trust, respect, helpfulness, as well as freedom of expression and acceptance of differences.

The faculty recognizes that adult students respond less readily to external factors (such as grades) than to internal motivation. The faculty recognizes that methods and techniques which involve the student most deeply in self-directed inquiry will produce the greatest learning. Beyond meeting the minimal competency in all areas of the curriculum, a student is encouraged to pursue areas of special interest to as great a depth as time, inclination and resources permit.

The faculty believes a student should be encouraged to develop his/her own artistic style, as long as the resulting artwork meets its stated objective.

The Program's faculty is willing to be held accountable for its curriculum.

First Year Second Year

Fall Semester

Human Gross Anatomy *
Medical Illustration Techniques IA
Electronic Media I

Fall Semester

Cell Biology *
Medical Illustration Techniques IIB
Surgical Observation & Sketching
Multimedia II

Spring Semester

Neuroanatomy
Medical Illustration Techniques IB
Surgical Techniques
Electronic Media II


Spring Semester

Pathology **
Learning Resources Management
Investigation of a Problem
Master’s Project
Summer Semester
Medical Illustration Techniques IIA
Surgical Observation & Sketching
Multimedia I
* Taken with medical students
** Taken with dental students

These links provide additional information on the MCG academic catalog, School of Graduate Studies curricula, and Medical Illustration Graduate Program course descriptions.

Students can continue to enroll until all graduation requirements are completed. Occasionally, one additional semester is necessary. Students have up to five years from the date of initial entry into the program to complete all requirements.


Copyright © 2002
Medical College of Georgia
All rights reserved.
School of Allied Health Sciences | Medical College of Georgia

All images © Medical College of Georgia and/or the artist.
All rights under copyright reserved.

Please e-mail comments, suggestions or questions to:
Steve Harrison at sharriso@mcg.edu.

Please e-mail information requests or questions about the program to: medart@mcg.edu.
July 20, 2005