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Successful development of generic capabilities in an undergraduate medical education program
Authors:H Patrick McNeil  Helen A Scicluna  Patrick Boyle  Michael C Grimm  Kathryn A Gibson  Philip D Jones
Institution:1. The South Western Sydney Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales , Sydney , Australia;2. Medical Education and Student Office, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales , Sydney , Australia;3. Q-Associates, Sydney , Australia;4. St George Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales , Sydney , Australia
Abstract:The development of generic capabilities or graduate attributes in communication, teamwork, critical analysis of information, problem solving and ethical practice is widely recognised as a desired outcome of higher education. This emphasis on generic capabilities has emerged despite ongoing debates about the concept and development of such capabilities. A recent review of comprehensive audits of Australian universities has found little evidence that such outcomes are being achieved. We used data from four different evaluations, both qualitative and quantitative, to explore whether these important generic capabilities are being learned by undergraduate students in the University of New South Wales (UNSW) new Medicine Program. University of New South Wales medical students are significantly more positive than other UNSW students that their university experience is developing several generic capabilities. Measurements concerning generic skills development from the Australian 2009 Learning and Teaching Performance Fund process support these findings. Analyses of qualitative data from two methodologically different student surveys found consistent evidence that medical students value generic capability development in the UNSW program. Furthermore, we report evidence that current UNSW medical students rate their clinical learning in professional placements as a significantly better experience than students in the previous discipline-based program. We believe this is a consequence of generic capability learning in the early years of the new program, such that our students are better prepared to maximise the value of learning from professional experiences. Our results represent consistent evidence of successful generic capability development as a result of a program-wide innovation in undergraduate education. To validate further our conclusions, external assessments of our graduates' generic capabilities in-action in the workplace are currently being obtained.
Keywords:generic skills  graduate attributes  graduate outcomes  lifelong learning
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