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The Hidden Curriculum
Posted by Literary Titan

Mastering the Hidden Curriculum reveals how the unspoken rules, hidden expectations, and subtle power dynamics of medical training can shape who struggles, who advances, and who learns to succeed in medicine. What first convinced you that the “hidden curriculum” in medicine was not peripheral, but central to trainee success?
This is an excellent question, as my recognition of the hidden curriculum was not an immediate revelation. Several years ago, while conducting a literature search, I encountered the concept of the hidden curriculum, and it immediately resonated with me. It captured something I had long been interested in but had not previously been able to clearly define. At that point, however, I had not fully appreciated its significance.
As I explored the topic more deeply, including areas that have received limited attention, and reflected on my own experiences, I began to recognize that the hidden curriculum is far more expansive and influential than is typically acknowledged. This realization created a sense of responsibility to share these insights, which ultimately led me to begin writing a book. Despite recognizing its importance, I had not yet concluded that it was central to success in medical education.
What ultimately solidified that perspective was engaging in conversations with colleagues and peers about my work. Regardless of institution or setting, the themes in their experiences were strikingly consistent. I began to hear a steady stream of examples, many involving seemingly minor missteps by trainees that nonetheless had outsized consequences. In some cases, a single incident could shape a supervisor’s perception of a trainee in a lasting way, effectively becoming a label that is difficult to overcome.
How did you decide which invisible forces in medical training were most important to name for readers?
In developing a comprehensive framework for the book, I aimed to identify the forces that most meaningfully shape the training experience. Broadly, I focused on two categories. First, I highlighted foundational influences (those that are highly impactful yet often difficult to recognize) because they are so deeply embedded within the culture of medicine. Second, I emphasized more visible, surface-level forces that nonetheless have a significant and immediate effect on trainees’ experiences and trajectories.
Examples of foundational influences include medicine’s historical shift from a spirituality of transcendence to one of immanence, the role of humanism in shaping medical practice, and the lasting influence of William Halsted, who established the first U.S. surgical residency under motivations that were likely, in part, self-serving. These forces are less frequently discussed, yet they fundamentally shape how training is structured and experienced.
In contrast, surface-level influences include factors such as the impact of role modeling on professional behavior and the drivers of specialty segregation by sex. While these may be more readily observable, they carry substantial consequences for how trainees navigate their environment and make career decisions.
What do you most hope a first-generation medical student or early-career resident feels after finishing your book?
Beyond the practical guidance such as the importance of actively seeking out strong mentorship, I hope that a first-generation medical student or early-career resident finishes the book with a genuine sense of belonging. That sense of belonging is a fundamental human need, and it can be especially elusive in environments where the hidden curriculum is not made explicit.
My hope is that, by understanding and navigating these often-unspoken dynamics, first-generation trainees feel empowered not only to find their place, but to do so as their authentic selves. With the support of meaningful mentorship and a clearer understanding of the training environment, they can begin to recognize that their unique perspectives are not liabilities, but strengths that can enhance both their own experience and the field more broadly.
Author Links: GoodReads | Website | LinkedIn
Key Features:
– Unravels the many unspokens―the hidden curriculum―of medical training
– Povides basic background material and strategies to succeed in medical training, focusing on information left out of the formal curriculum and often not conveyed to trainees
– Features a balanced, evidence-based discussion on many areas of misinformation and controversy, such as statistical testing, the gender pay gap in medicine, the replication crisis, generational trends and biases, and more
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Mastering the Hidden Curriculum: Unlocking Success in Medical Training, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Vance T. Lehman, writer, writing
Mastering the Hidden Curriculum: Unlocking Success in Medical Training
Posted by Literary Titan

In Mastering the Hidden Curriculum, author Vance T. Lehman argues that succeeding in medicine requires far more than mastering the formal syllabus. The book frames the “hidden curriculum” as a network of unspoken expectations, invisible challenges, and stealth influences, then builds outward into learning science, professionalism, hierarchy, well-being, research literacy, clinical rotations, residency applications, and finally the larger questions of expertise and complexity in medicine. What emerges is not a narrow study guide, but a wide-ranging map of how medical training actually works when the lectures end and the real stakes begin.
Lehman writes like someone who has watched trainees rise, stall, and sometimes quietly sabotage themselves without even realizing it. I found that compelling. There’s a real moral urgency underneath the prose, a sense that this information shouldn’t stay locked away as insider knowledge for the already advantaged. At its best, the writing is clear, brisk, and impressively synthetic, pulling together sociology, psychology, history, and day-to-day clinical realities without sounding flimsy or trend-chasing. Still, I also felt the book’s density. It asks for attention, and at times it feels more like a deeply annotated field manual. For me, that was both a strength.
The book’s central claim, that tiny informational asymmetries can snowball into life-shaping differences in opportunity, felt sharp and sadly believable. Its emphasis on punctuality, professionalism, feedback, learning strategy, mentorship, and institutional culture could sound obvious in lesser hands, but Lehman makes those themes feel newly consequential by showing how “obvious” things are often exactly what people fail to name. I especially appreciated the insistence that medicine isn’t just a test of knowledge but of judgment, perception, behavior, and stamina. I finished the manuscript feeling energized, sobered, and honestly a bit moved. It’s the kind of book that can make a reader look back on professional formation with a mix of recognition, regret, and relief.
I think Mastering the Hidden Curriculum is an ambitious, intelligent, and useful book that treats medical training as the complicated human system it really is. I’d recommend it most strongly to medical students, residents, first-generation trainees, and early-career physicians, but I also think faculty, mentors, and program leaders would benefit from it because it reveals the machinery they often help perpetuate without naming. In the end, this is a demanding book, but it’s a worthwhile one, and I’d recommend it to anyone who wants to understand not just how medicine is taught, but how people actually survive and succeed inside it.
Pages: 320 | ISBN: 1041059884
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, health, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Mastering the Hidden Curriculum: Unlocking Success in Medical Training, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, story, Vance Lehman, writer, writing




