| Literature DB >> 26845777 |
Vicki Langendyk1, Glenn Mason1, Shaoyu Wang2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study analyses the ways in which curriculum reform facilitated student learning about professionalism.Entities:
Keywords: curriculum development; curriculum reform; design based research; discourses of professionalism; pedagogical theories
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26845777 PMCID: PMC4744412 DOI: 10.5116/ijme.5683.c2e0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Med Educ ISSN: 2042-6372
Questions posed to students and tutors
| Participants and data source | Questions |
|---|---|
| Student survey questions for free text responses | § In what ways does the PPD curriculum contribute to your learning to be a health professional? |
| § How could the curriculum be improved? | |
| § How do the PPD assessment activities contribute to your learning? | |
| § What is the value of using the e-portfolio? | |
| Tutor focus group stimulus questions | § Do you feel that you have had any opportunities to contribute to the PPD curriculum, and if so, in what ways. And if you have, do you think the suggestions you have made have been adopted? |
| § Do you think that the worldview that the activities represent kind of correlate with your worldview on PPD and its role in the curriculum? | |
| § What would you like to achieve as a PPD tutor. What are your main objectives? | |
| § Looking back at your teaching what sorts of rules and guidelines do you have to follow? | |
| § Do people feel part of the SOM? | |
| § Why do you think the e-portfolio was introduced? |
Themes from qualitative analysis
| Theme | Description |
|---|---|
| Becoming an ethical doctor | Identity development |
| Moral, ethical and emotional development | |
| Holistic personal growth | |
| Professional behaviour | |
| Developing a philosophy of medicine | Medicine as a social, historical, cultural and political practice |
| Beyond the biomedical model | |
| The importance of the patient experience | |
| Learning through discussion, critical thinking and reflection in a safe environment | Creating a safe open learning environment for students to learn |
| Learning is about engagement and tailoring teaching to student needs | |
| Engendering reflection | |
| Being challenged and critical thinking | |
| Assessment promotes learning | Assessment promotes learning |
| Ungraded, progressive assessment facilitates personal development | |
| Diversity of assessment modes encourage personal exploration and expression | |
| Electronic portfolio as a distraction to teaching and learning | Complexity of e-portfolio subsumed learning time |
| Recognition of affordances but e-portfolio did not add value to learning | |
| E-portfolio as an inadequate tool for collaboration |
Figure 1Activity theory and the e-portfolio