Title: John Carpenter
1John Carpenter
- Evaluating the Outcomes of Education
- towards a comprehensive andrigorous approach
- TITLE OF THE PRESENTATION
- Sub Title
- Date
2Last year
- I asked Why should we evaluate the outcomes of
social work education? - I suggested
- What we might mean by outcomes.
- How they could be measured.
- What kinds of research design might be
appropriate.
3SIESWE and SCIE
- Jointly published
- Evaluating the Outcomes of Social Work Education
(Jan 2005). - At conference or pdf via
- www.scie.org.uk
- New SCIE resources
4Question 1 (affective or attitudinal)
- I am interested in methods of evaluating the
outcomes of SWE - Strongly disagree
- Disagree
- Dont know
- Agree
- Strongly agree
5Question 2 (declarative knowledge)
- What is a randomised controlled trial?
- Participants are allocated to control and
comparison groups and t1 and t2 scores are
compared. - Allocated randomly to one or more experimental
groups and a control group T1 vs. T2 scores
compared. - Frustrated researcher tells uncontrolled,
randomised participants to get a grip.
6Question 3 (self-efficacy)
- I am confident that I know how to design a
methodologically sound evaluation of the outcomes
of an aspect of a SWE course. - Strongly disagree
- Disagree
- Dont know
- Agree
- Strongly agree
7Question 4 (motivational)
- I am determined to carry out a controlled or
comparative evaluation of our course/module next
year. - Strongly disagree
- Disagree
- Dont know
- Agree
- Strongly agree
8- What about the outcomes?
- Did my (educational) interventions have any
effect? - If you were in Glasgow last year.
9Question 5 (behavioural implementation)
- Have you carried out a controlled or comparative
evaluation of your course/module in the last
year? - Oops! Sorry, I forgot.
- THEY wouldnt let me.
- I tried, but it didnt work
- Yes!
10Response to the paper
- 4 extremely positive emails e.g.
- Fascinating material - much of which I didn't
know about/hadn't thought about but realise I
need to know! Moreover you make the case for a
more sophisticated and fit-for-purpose approach
to evaluation of teaching and learning very
convincingly. - 1 email exchange and one conversation to clarify
that I am not a hard-nosed positivist who hates
qualitative research. - 6 positive (but less coherent) verbal responses.
11A pretty poor research design
- No systematic sampling.
- Unknown but probably hopeless response rate.
- No control or comparison group.
- No attempt to collect the data.
- Useless qualitative data.
- Biased researcher.
12In my defence
- Some attempt to measure a range of outcomes
- Attitudes
- Knowledge
- Behaviour.
- There were 3 time points
- Beginning of the presentation
- End
- Long term follow-up.
- Multiple baseline would have been better.
13Towards Better Evaluations
- Comprehensive approach to identifying outcomes,
including user-defined outcomes. - Selecting measures which work.
- Collecting qualitative and quantitative
information about the processes as well as the
outcomes. - Using rigorous designs.
- Build in comparison and control groups, including
waiting list controls and repeated measures.
14A Case Study
- The Birmingham University Programme in Community
Mental Health - Post-qualification postgraduate level (assessed)
- Health and social work staff seconded from MH
teams in the region - Part-time (1 day per week) for 2 years (plus 1
for Masters dissertation) - Run by Depts. of Social Work and Psychology with
input to course planning and management from
service agencies and users.
15Curriculum
- Principles and values (user-centred)
- Assessment and care planning
- Mental Health Law
- Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
- Family Intervention
- Interagency and team working
- Research methods (for MA)
16External evaluation (Uni. of Durham John
Carpenter, Di Barnes and Claire Dickinson)
- Commissioned by NHS
- Independent (Not carried out by the Programme
trainers) - Longitudinal 5 years following 3 cohorts
- Comprehensive many levels of outcomes.
- Focused on outcomes following through learning to
practice - Concerned about process
- Comparative
- Formative AND summative.
17Outcomes the Kirkpatrick/Barr Framework
18Summary of methods and measures
19Key characteristics of students
- 58 aged between 31-40
- 69 were women
- Between 9 and 22 students from Black and
minority ethnic communities - Tended to be well established professionals
- Majority had been in current job for more than 5
years, 22 more than 10 years.
20Profession of students starting the Programme
Cohort 1 n45
Cohort 2 n51
Cohort 3 n45
Cohort 4 n47
Cohort 5 n37
21Learners reactions to the Programme
22A stressful experience?
23Changing attitudes
- Began course with positive attitudes towards
principles and values underpinning community
mental health care - No differences between professions
- No change over time
- Valued opportunity to reflect on their values
24- Reported increased awareness of social
perspectives and service users views. - The course has changed my perspective. For me
it has been a tremendous change as we worked very
much in the medical model. It gave me some
answers, for example, the social disability
model. The user involvement aspect has shifted
my thinking - obviously so. It helped that as
part of the course we talked about what we
brought to our work. (CPN Interview 3)
25Professional Identification
26Stereotypes
- Psychiatrists and psychologists high for
academic rigour and leadership. Low for
communication practical skills and breadth of
life experience. - Social workers High interpersonal skills
moderate in academic rigour and practical skills.
Poor for leadership. - CPNs high on interpersonal skills and practical
skills. Lower for leadership and academic rigour.
27Changing stereotypes
- Little effect after 9 months and 21 months. Why?
- The stereotypes were so strongly held and
reinforced by day-to-day contact with colleagues
that the effect of the teaching and learning
experience was counteracted. - The conditions necessary to change stereotypes
were not sufficiently present on the Programme.
28Typical of their profession?
- The OTs are typical generally we are more open
minded... - But The nurses are atypical. On the course the
nurses are more open minded, willing to move
forward. They are not as defensive of their
profession - at the edge of crawling out of their
hole Those who are not inclined will not go on
the course. It is self-selective. (OT Interview
4) - Participants are not willing to generalise
29Necessary conditions
- Opportunities for productive inter-group learning
were missed (group membership and mixing) - Similarities rather than differences in roles
were emphasised. Consequently, the difficulties
in interprofessional working were infrequently
exposed and explored. - Feedback and programme re-designwith a positive
response
30Do they learn? (1) Partnership working with users
Students ratings of importance, and
self-assessments of knowledge and skills at T1
and T3. Scale 0not at all, 5intermediate,
10very high/expert.
Rating of importance
T1
T3
31Do they learn? (2) Multidisciplinary team working
Students ratings of importance, and
self-assessments of knowledge and skills at T1
and T3. Scale 0not at all, 5intermediate,
10very high/expert.
Rating of importance
T1
T3
32Do they learn? (3) Psychosocial Interventions
Students ratings of importance, and
self-assessments of knowledge and skills at T1
and T3. Scale 0not at all, 5intermediate,
10very high/expert.
Rating of importance
T1
T3
33Barriers to implementation of learning
34Implementation role conflict
35Climate for Innovation
36Change in organisational practice
- Teams only moderately open to innovation
- Difficult to introduce changes in practice and to
cascade learning to others. - Time and energy act as deterrents to swimming
against the tide. - But, numerous (corroborated) reports of success.
37Outcomes Service users views on trainees
- She makes one feel that what a person thinks
matters. - My worker understands me because she is trained
to understand. She understands me because she
cares about me. - She treats me as how I am, as an individual and
not an illness.
38Outcomes for users
- Statistically significant improvements (t1-t2)
- General social functioning (GAS)
- Reduction in mental health and social problems
(HoNOS) - Decrease in psychiatric symptoms (BPRS)
- Improvement in life skills (LSP).
- But, can this be attributed to the training?
- Comparison groups also tended to improve except
for life skills.
39Change in Life Skills
40So, its good news
- The students did learn.
- They did put their learning into practice.
- It did make a difference to their teams.
- It did improve outcomes for users.
- Carpenter, J. et al. (in press) The outcomes of
IPE for community mental health. J.of
Interprofessional Care
41What about SWE?
- Its desirable and essential to engage students
in the systematic evaluation of their own
learning. (Test data MCQs, concept mapping,
ratings.) - Engage service user trainers and consultants.
- Engage educators in the systematic evaluation of
learning outcomes. - Compare and contrast collaboration between
programmes.
42- Enthusiasts wanted to join a project to
- Test the feasibility of outcome measures and
research designs - Generate high quality evidence about the
effectiveness of methods of SWE - Build capacity and capability amongst academics
and trainers, including users and carers, in the
evaluation of SWE.
43Learning sets
- Group of enthusiasts who will learn together over
3 years - Face-to-face meetings (4 in Year 1) discussion
board. - Focus on real problems, provide for group
reflection and learning, establish personal
responsibility, action based. - Collaborate, e.g. on cross-programme evaluations.
44- Social work educators
- Lecturers
- Service user and carer educators working on a
programme - Practice teachers.
45- Facilitation and consultation by John Carpenter
and Hilary Burgess (Bristol SWAP) supported by
SCIE and SIESWE. - Programme support from SWAP (4k per programme).
46Whats needed
- 3-year Programme-wide commitment, plus Head of
Department - curriculum development committee comprising
staff, user and carer consultants and students - lead local evaluator with time and eager to
collaborate - willing and able to negotiate adjustments to
timetable and curriculum - user/carer educator/evaluator
- commitment to disseminate and publish
- willing to host meetings.
47Plus
- Agree to participate in a qualitative study of
the process of the project. - Have some ideas for a project but not a
proposal at this stage. - Passing the exam
48Process
- End July Invitations via SWAP, SCIE, SIESWE to
be received by end September. - Mid October selection of programmes
- Mid November 1st meeting of learning set
- Meetings January-March-June
49The Exam Preview
- Define the following
- Counterbalancing. (p.32)
- Automaticity. (p.13)
- A standardised adolescent (p.29).
50Further information
- See handout
- Email j.s.w.carpenter_at_bristol.ac.uk