is fundamentally about facilitating access to quality radiology teaching material, so that medical professionals from around the world can better diagnose and treat their patients. We will all miss Ray, and can all learn a great deal from the example he has set. I found Ray to be a funny and candid person, who clearly cared deeply about the idea of creating educational material and sharing it with the world. Ray became our physics editor during which time he made over 170 edits, many on improving the large contribution imported into from his site.ĭuring this time we exchanged many emails. That someone would care so much about teaching, at what must have been such a difficult time, was very inspiring. I can fill in some of the physics topics that you need as well as add or modify some of your existing articles if you wish. I retired last year a bit early than I anticipated because of treatment for stage IV carcinoid cancer and may not be around in a few years to continue it. I was looking at your site again and have decided, rather belatedly, to offer any of my website materials to yours. True to his word he did. Six years later, in 2013, I unexpectedly received an email from Ray. In 2007, shortly after opening to the world I reached out to Ray and asked if he would be interested in contributing. It is with great sadness that I found out today, rather belatedly, that one of our past editors, J. Ray Ballinger, passed last year. Ray was one of the very first to embrace online education, starting in 1994, and as such is one of the fathers of what we now recognise as open-access education.
June 1 - full course video available for viewing.May 30 - last day to register to watch course online.May 16 - full course takes place in Melbourne.Early April - "bonus video" available for viewing.March 31 - last day to qualify for the "bonus video".If you've already registered for the Emergency Radiology Course then you don't need to do anything we'll automatically give you access to the "bonus video" as soon as it is available.
The cost to watch online is just $25 which is amazingly good value, and for people in 116 developing countries the course is free! This bonus offer applies to anyone who registers to attend the course in Melbourne on May 16 and also to anyone who registers to watch the course online. Register before March 31 for our Emergency Radiology Course and you'll receive bonus access to a 30-minute paediatric emergency radiology video recorded by Dr Jeremy Jones (UK). Today we're announcing a "bonus video" offer. cases = previous case not previous component (yet).slides = previous slide / start of previous case.cases = next component (or next case if at the end).slides = next slide / start of next case.You can now control your presentation using the keyboard arrow keys. Grey eye = invisible.Ĭontrol your presentation with keyboard arrow keys Just click the three horizontal lines in the bottom right corner of a case thumbnail and toggle visibility. Well now you can hide any (or even all) components form a study.
Or maybe you want to hide the questions etc. Sometimes you don't want to show the whole case, but just one study. Then click the + where you want to add them, and drag and drop one or more images into you playlist (you need to be in edit mode to do this naturally). These can be anything, but ideally they are powerpoint / keynote slides exported as images (just go to "save as -> images" or "export as images" menu options in "file"). You can add static images between cases in your playlist. We have not finished yet, but already this is rapidly becoming a new standard in teaching radiology. We have been putting in a tremendous amount of work into improving our playlists and creating a compelling format to present radiology cases, with full stack and multi-study case support.