The ability to find, interpret and use information is a key skill in any clinician's arsenal. During medical training, we aim to equip our students with the ability to navigate the potentially baffling amount of information available online, and come to valid conclusions. This article reflects on the nature of research skills and how they are delivered in medical education. It also explores whether these are the most efficient methods for enabling students to become able researchers. Comparisons with other types of university degrees are made, and consideration given to how research skills should best be integrated into our teaching.Keywords: research skills; transferable skills; life-long learning; employability How can we best prepare our students to enquire, evaluate and be life-long learners?Research skills are required in all branches of medicine (Laidlaw et al., 2012). Clinicians need to be lifelong learners, able to evaluate evidence and understand the process of scientific enquiry. Whether or not a doctor pursues a research career, they still need to be able to make sense, and be critical, of the huge amount of information available online. They may also be required to carry out their own research study, and the training we provide should lay the foundations for them to develop their own rigorous and informed approaches to research.Knowledge, skills and behaviours can be absorbed by students without them noticing, and it is only when the values they are exposed to conflict with their own that they become conscious they have been taught covertly (Phillips, 2013). This approach to conveying information may be more appropriate for some transferable skills than others, and carries the danger that values can be imparted on students without them considering if they fully agree with or understand them. Research skills include tangible principles that can be taught more visibly; like good study design and the scientific method. Evidence suggests that we are more likely to recognise having learned something if we are told explicitly that we will be learning it (Murdoch-Eaton et al., 2010). In addition, enabling students to be more aware of their own skillsets may well be important for employability, as they will be able to communicate these skillsets to potential employers when applying for jobs. In a typical academic setting, teachers may have spent decades with research as their primary activity. In contrast, the students' primary activity is to learn and understand medical knowledge. Thus, we may need to be more overt about research skills and explain their impact on employment within our curricula so that the students can understand what they are learning, and why. As educators, we must understand the perceptions of research that students have when they enrol in medical school. Most of our medical students are high-achievers, previously attaining high grades by learning and recalling facts. A UK study found that whilst school pupils are generally familiar with the idea of research, for example in form...