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Evidence-based impact of experiential learning Professor Ian Bates Head of Education Development School of Pharmacy University of London
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European Directive –3000 hours of directed study at 4-5 years’ duration –Greater part of curriculum and not less than 50% of final year must be core –At least 35% on actions and uses of drugs –At least 35% on experiments and data analysis –Research project of 3 – 6 months duration
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The professional imperative –Better health care, –Better patient experience, –Better value for money
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–Curricular pressures Integration of pharmaceutical and clinical sciences –Dislocation of education and practice –Not competency-based Performance of our graduates? –Not a partnership With national health systems With existing health professionals What’s holding us back?
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Short term vs Long term –Long term The science of medicines must be foundation of education Knowledge half-life –Short-term imperatives Understand and engage with the health agenda
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The learning experience Syllabus – knowledge & content Delivery & quality Outcomes Context – institutional, societal & cultural Access, finance & policy What’s holding us back… …curriculum
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Assessment Goals Independence Good Teaching Pharmacy students N = 5,243 p<0.0001 Standardised mean scores The Learning Experience…
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–It varies –Is this acceptable? –How can we improve it? The learning experience
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the Knowledge problem …pharmacy syllabus is overcrowded chemistrypharmacologybiotechnology geneticsmedicine analysisformulation physical chemistryethicspharmacognosy phytochemistrydrug designimmunology pharmacokineticstherapeuticspathology epidemiology health economicschemical analysis physiologyproteomicsstatistics lawLicensing&marketingADRs microbiologymedicinal chemistrybiochemistry toxicologydrug metabolismgenomics social & behavioural sciences
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And so…? –Methods PBL Near to patient cases Clinical contact Experiential Subject Integration –Designs Scientists as practitioners Adult learning & self-direction Pragmatic & meaningful in situ LLL
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“Experiential” learning –Experience We all have ‘experiences’ We often learn from an “experience” Working or work-like As children…. Anecdotal…. –No real mysterious or obscure theory
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The real issue… …getting the “experience” to UG and PG learners (either students or practitioners) –Design –Environment –Outcomes
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Competency → Competence → Performance Fit to practise? …outcomes
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Miller’s pyramid Does Shows how Knows how Knows performance assessment in vivo performance assessment in vitro clinical context assessment factual assessment From UG to post-registration development
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Experiential learning –Should attempt to bring relevant experience to theory –Should therefore illustrate knowledge (working knowledge?) –Should therefore re-enforce primary learning …it should move learning towards the competency agenda…
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10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 1996/971997/981998/992001/02 Pharm Care Competencies (OSCE) 60% 30% Graduation One year later McRobbie et al
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Skills Behaviours Knowledge Values attitudes Competency “Competence” is a complex educational construct…...with new currency value
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An example.. Drug-drug interactions:- –Theory, knowledge –Examples (from lectures, books, case studies, etc) –Exams and questions
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Moving from “knowing” (theory)… towards …“doing” (performance)
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Miller’s pyramid Does Shows how Knows how Knows performance assessment in vivo performance assessment in vitro clinical context assessment factual assessment From UG to post-registration development
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Barriers –Assessment –Resource –Culture
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Miller’s pyramid Does Shows how Knows how Knows performance assessment in vivo performance assessment in vitro clinical context assessment factual assessment From UG to post-registration development
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Barriers –Assessment –Resource –Culture …there must be a working relationship with the university and the work environment
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Joint Programme Board (JPB) Generalist Training (3 years) www.postgraduatepharmacy.org –Government funding = committment –PG Diploma in General Pharmacy Practice - Core - MI, Technical, Patient & Clinical Services –Common Validation by HEIs in collaborative –Currently 300 practitioner-students (target 2009 = 750) School Pharmacy Univ Brighton Univ East Anglia Univ Portsmouth Medway School King’s London Univ Reading Kingston Univ NHS
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Predominantly FDL and e-modes Predominantly face-to-face modes Cohort learners Lone learner On-site (HEI) learning Off-site (work) learning FDL, e-modes off-site, experiential Independent Career driven Learning modality with time/career pathway UG UG/Pre Post-reg Higher
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General and Higher level practice: Growing the next generation The next [urgent] challenge… –Competency frameworks for undergraduate education –Assessment of performance at UG level (medicines-centered)
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The pharmaceutical imperative –Bring our pharmaceutical science into healthcare practice
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Where is our professional ‘centre of gravity’? Patient-focussed, medicines-centred..can only achieve this through a partnership of universities and health care employers (systems)
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Mortality rate Index W W W W W W R-Square = 0.16 R-Square = 0.76
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Evidence-based impact of experiential learning Professor Ian Bates Head of Education Development School of Pharmacy University of London
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