Julie Rice, MD, MSMS
Vice President of Membership Johns Hopkins
Biography
Hello! My name is Julie Rice (she/they) and I am the Director of Simulation Education in the Johns Hopkins Department of Emergency Med. I completed my Emergency Medicine training at the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Residency Program (2015) and was invited to join the faculty after graduation. I am a graduate of the ACEP Teaching Fellowship (2015), the Comprehensive Instructor Course at the Center for Medical Simulation in Boston (2016) and the longitudinal Curriculum Development Workshop at Johns Hopkins (2017). Most recently I completed a Masters Degree in Medical and Healthcare Simulation at Drexel University (2019).
I also have two cats, McQueen and Gozer, who think I'm just great (high praise from a cat).
If elected, I hope to strengthen the mentorship offered by the Simulation Academy by looking into ways to provide more opportunities for individualized mentorship, especially for those just starting with Sim Academy. Mentoring programs are important to increase engagement, retain members, recruit members, and create sustainable projects within our group. When I first began with the Sim Academy I often felt lost and my hope is to find ways to better engage new members so they can find their place within our amazing group of educators!
I am also dedicated to serving the committee which has been so helpful for me. Many of my early contacts in the Sim world were met at the annual SAEM Sim Committee Meeting. After completing my Masters in Medical and Healthcare Simulation at Drexel University, I would like to shift focus from my own development, to helping the development of others in our field.
I also have two cats, McQueen and Gozer, who think I'm just great (high praise from a cat).
If elected, I hope to strengthen the mentorship offered by the Simulation Academy by looking into ways to provide more opportunities for individualized mentorship, especially for those just starting with Sim Academy. Mentoring programs are important to increase engagement, retain members, recruit members, and create sustainable projects within our group. When I first began with the Sim Academy I often felt lost and my hope is to find ways to better engage new members so they can find their place within our amazing group of educators!
I am also dedicated to serving the committee which has been so helpful for me. Many of my early contacts in the Sim world were met at the annual SAEM Sim Committee Meeting. After completing my Masters in Medical and Healthcare Simulation at Drexel University, I would like to shift focus from my own development, to helping the development of others in our field.
