Support for diagnostic imaging residents can include live remote zoom rounds sessions or known case conferences as needed to facilitate excellent resident training. Sessions can be scheduled regularly or offered as interim or intermittent coverage. This form of educational support will be structured based on the needs of your program but typically offered at 2-hour sessions.
Support for residents from other disciplines (surgery, internal medicine, oncology, cardiology) but who need oversite by a veterinary radiologist to complete their residency requirements can be arranged in small groups and in 1 or 2-week blocks. Please contact us for details.
A Digital DIVA representative will contact your institution to schedule the sessions (live remote or pre-recorded) in the order and timing established through the consultation process.
Lectures are typically 50 minutes long and cover specific imaging topics essential for a basic understanding of veterinary diagnostic imaging. Lectures can be delivered in a pre-recorded format as seen in this sample with an option for translation into different languages. Alternatively, lectures can be delivered remotely but live so that students can ask questions through the chat and answer questions asked by the instructor in real-time.
Discussion sessions are typically 110 minutes long and are used to reinforce and expand upon topic delivered in lecture. Discussions are case-based and interactive. They can be delivered in a pre-recorded format as seen in this sample with an option for translation into different languages. Live discussion sessions are best suited for groups of 40 students or less where students are given access to case material ahead of time and will be expected to interpret images when called upon by the instructor. Some discussion sessions are topically aligned with lectures while others are aimed at pre-clinical students and involve a variety of types of cases with varying levels of difficulty.
Lectures are typically 50 minutes long and cover specific imaging topics essential for a basic understanding of veterinary diagnostic imaging. Lectures can be delivered in a pre-recorded format as seen in this sample with an option for translation into different languages. Alternatively, lectures can be delivered remotely but live so that students can ask questions through the chat and answer questions asked by the instructor in real-time.