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Experiential Placements in Pharmacy Carrick Institute DBI Standing Committee meeting presentation 31 August 2007 Assoc.

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Presentation on theme: "Experiential Placements in Pharmacy Carrick Institute DBI Standing Committee meeting presentation 31 August 2007 Assoc."— Presentation transcript:

1 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld Experiential Placements in Pharmacy Carrick Institute DBI Standing Committee meeting presentation 31 August 2007 Assoc Prof Ieva Stupans Dr Susanne Owen Involving Students in Research Decision-making: Developing a Competency Graduated Descriptors Tool HERDSA 2010 Conference Dr Susanne Owen Prof Ieva Stupans Assoc Prof Greg Ryan Ms Leigh McKauge Mr Jim Woulfe

2 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld Australian Health restructure : National Boards (July 2010) Ageing general population & health workforce : more health students; need for more placement opportunities Health students assessed in relevant competencies (skills, knowledge, attitudes), with competencies being holistic & acknowledging complexity & situational contexts Graduated (incremental) competency levels for novice to experienced increasingly acknowledged (Benner, 1984; Dreyfus & Dreyfus (1996) Pharmacy university program followed by one year internship after program completion, including competency assessment

3 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld 2007 ALTC-funded Australian pharmacy project mapped experiential placement programs, identifying characteristics & issues Experiential placements valued but students emphasise need for scaffolding & feedback on progress towards achieving competencies 2008-2010 ALTC project focused on improving curriculum planning & developing graduated descriptors, with stakeholder consultations conducted across Australian states & territories Student consultations at each pharmacy school & at four consecutive annual student leader forums

4 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld Benefits of researchers & practitioners working together (Pew, 2003; Hemsley-Brown, 2004; Hoppes & Chesbro, 2003) Students involved in satisfaction surveys but usually limited opportunity for decision-making involvement & student views sometimes sidelined Knowledge-use dissemination models highlight value of stakeholder involvement: extended workshops, ongoing contact, follow-up action (Floyd, 2001; Louis & Dentler, 1988) Community of learners approach beneficial for developing stakeholder-researcher solutions to problems: ongoing involvement & dissemination educational change

5 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld To collaboratively develop and trial competency graduated descriptors for early and late stage pharmacy placements & to include a significant role for students within the research process

6 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld Student leader input Individual university student groups Consultations in states Presentations at national level (PSA and APC) Project team face to face and teleconference Face to face meetings with reference group Consultations at state level National level through APSA workshops Pharmacy Academics Project team Pharmacy Students Professional organisations and preceptors PROJECT 1 Literature and discussions * Placement mapping Placement handbook analysis Consultations * Options paper * PROJECT 2 Literature and discussions Initial workshops * Consultations* Develop material Trialling and evaluation * Finalisation and dissemination *

7 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld National student leaders’ workshop preliminary feedback Final tool exemplar State/territory stakeholder consultation data including student focus group sessions Levels of support required for early & late placement National student leader feedback on final tool

8 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld Student groups at conference workshop provided verbal/written feedback regarding identification of characteristics for early & late placement students for eight competency areas Favourable student feedback regarding involvement: This was very useful as we did not touch on any competencies in our course at uni. This makes me think about my own competency levels as a student and what is expected of me. Good to have students involved with the (consultation) session…it means we can be more involved with making an experiential learning activity more relevant and effective. Also using competency standards means that we as students know what is required of us in a professional setting.

9 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld

10 Six key themes regarding format/value of evolving graduated descriptors competency tool: University-profession competency continuum Grid competency developmental aspects Self-assessment & reflection focus Clear expectations & feedback Preceptor support and training University & preceptor scaffolded student learning

11 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld Student views (n=102) re levels of support expectations for early & late placement students across 8 competency areas: Early placement students need assistance (direction, instruction) or minimal assistance Late placement students need minimal guidance (student views) or guidance (prompting, cues) (preceptor/academic views)

12 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld “it’s not that hard to get your head around” “pages are rather busy and daunting” “too blue” “bigger comments box needed to be more reflective” These views were considered further by the project team. Very positive student response to being involved

13 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld  Student and other stakeholder contributions informing all research phases: inception, implementation, evaluation, future decisions  High student satisfaction at involvement in the various research process phases.  High student attendance numbers: attended after-hours consultations after completing offsite placements.  Trusting relationship built over four years; student views highly valued

14 http://peu.pharm.usyd.edu.au/peld

15  Dr Susanne Owen  University of South Australia  Susanne.owen@unisa.edu.au


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