1. Student engagement in medical education: A mixed-method study on medical students as module co-directors in curriculum development.
- Author
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Milles, Lennart Steffen, Hitzblech, Tanja, Drees, Simon, Wurl, Wiebke, Arends, Peter, and Peters, Harm
- Subjects
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CURRICULUM planning , *FOCUS groups , *MATHEMATICAL models , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL education , *MEDICAL students , *SOCIAL role , *STUDENTS , *TEACHER-student relationships , *THEORY - Abstract
Introduction: Beyond participation in evaluation of teaching, there is sparse research available on more active roles of medical students in curriculum development. We report on a model of student engagement where medical students function as module co-directors, and how this is experienced by faculty and student module directors. Methods: Student engage in co-development of their curriculum with a high level of autonomy in organizing their activities. We conducted a mixed-methods, convergent design study based on surveys with faculty and student module co-directors and a student co-director focus group. Quantitative data were analyzed descriptively. Qualitative analysis was performed inductively. Results: Quantitatively, the majority of both faculty and student module directors report that the curriculum benefits from the students' work (95 and 94%). Both groups see each other as equal partners (80 and 87%). Qualitatively, this is related to students' competencies such as "bringing in broad and unique knowledge of the curriculum", "giving the students' perspective a voice," and "contributing ideas for improvement". Key strategies and challenges of the student co-module directors are illuminated. Conclusions: Student module co-directors represent a well-accepted practice model for curriculum development. This report may stimulate other faculties to engage their students more actively in medical education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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