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Community Partnerships Program

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Title: Community Partnerships Program


1
Community Partnerships Program
  • Dr. Tangerine Holt
  • Academic Convenor CPP
  • Centre for Medical and Health Sciences Education

2
Purpose of Presentation
  • Provide an overview of the CPP Program and model
  • Provide an overview of CPP placement
  • Discuss strategies for successful placement
    implementation

3
CPP Goal and Objectives
  • GOAL
  • Develop a perspective on issues of social equity
    and justice, but particularly as they relate to
    the practice of medicine
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Develop an understanding of social and public
    policy and how it impacts on individuals health.
  • Develop knowledge of barriers faced by people
    accessing social support services, their
    relevance to medicine and individuals health.
  • Develop an appreciation of how and why community
    organisations deliver their services.
  • Develop an understanding of the whole person
    and in particular the social and economic context
    of health and illness.

4
CPP Structure and Key Partners
Medical Curriculum Management Committee (MCMC)
Year-2 Management Committee Assoc. Ben Canny and
Dr Carol Lawson
CPP Strategic Management Committee Chaired by
Dr. Philip Mendes, Social Work Department CPP
Team Key Partner Agency Representatives
CPP Operational Management Committee Chaired by
Dr. Tangerine Holt CPP Academic Convenor CPP
Team All Agency Representatives
Faculty Field Liaison Officers (FFLO)
Community Partners
5
CPP Partners 2006
  • Melbourne Citymission
  • Monash Volunteer Resource Centre
  • Salvation Army Primary Health EastCare and
    Crisis Services divisions
  • Wesley Mission
  • Eastern Access Community Health
  • Gellibrand Residential Services
  • Health Works, Footscray
  • Jewish Care
  • Knox Community Health
  • Moreland Community Health
  • Ranges Community Health
  • Whitehorse Community Health
  • Southern Health
  • Ashburton Support Services
  • Knox Community Volunteers
  • Anglicare
  • Brotherhood of St Laurence
  • Child and Family Care Network
  • City of Casey
  • City of Monash
  • Inner East Community Health
  • Inner South Community Health
  • Karingal, Monash, Mt Eliza, Wellington Secondary
    Colleges, and Beregarra Secondary College
  • Living Room Primary Health Service for injecting
    drug users
  • Central Bayside Community Health
  • Caulfield Community Health
  • First Step Program
  • Ovulation Method Resource Centre

6
Chris Award for his work with Anglicare's Lazarus
Centre for the homeless. Rahul successfully
linked clients to appropriate health care
services and designed a brochure outlining
healthcare issues among the homeless population.
Lalor
Melbourne
Werribee
N
Dr. Philip Mendes, Chair of the CPP Management
Committee presents Ms. Cindy Koletsis of
Anglicare Victoria with a Certificate of
Appreciation for her contribution to the CPP
Program as a Supervisor in 2004. The faculty
recognises the invaluable support and field
education provided by hundreds of
multi-disciplinary professionals at our partner
agencies
Clayton Campus
Children and Youth
Indigenous Australians
Home- lessness
Anglicare Victoria
Brotherhood of St Laurence
Caulfield Community Health
Child Family Care Network
Student reflection following a placement with a
service supporting injecting drug users On
reflection, many of my experiences and encounters
have transformed my impressions of patient
treatment and what it means to be a doctor when
treating patients with sensitive and challenging
social circumstances. It became increasingly
evident that treating a patient spanned far
beyond the provision of medications and
procedures. Many in society arent afforded the
same opportunities, therefore it seems
fundamental to patient treatment that doctors
have a firm understanding of the issues their
patients are facing. The skills developed at my
placement will hopefully benefit my outlook on
medical practice for years to come.
Adult Family
Turning Point
Drug Alcohol
First Step Program
City of Casey
Local Government
Whitehorse Community Health
City of Monash
Wesley Mission
Inner East Comm Health
MBBS Year 2 Theme 1 CPP
Education, Employment Training
Aged Care
E
W
Welfare Agencies
Community Health
Southern Health
Inner South Comm Health
Jesuit Social Services
Salvation Army
Jewish Care
Ranges Community Health
Secondary colleges
Mt Eliza
Karingal Secondary College
Moreland Community Health
Refugees Migrants
Mental health
Monash Secondary College
Monash Volunteer Resource Centre
Melbourne Citymission
Mt Eliza Secondary College
Living Room Primary Health Service
Wellington Secondary College
Know Community Health
Community Health
Research Social Policy
Disability
N
Rosebud
7
CPP An integral component of the MBBS
  • Hurdle requirement for all 2nd year MBBS students
  • CPP Model
  • 12-weeks one-day per week (Tuesday) a
    mini-block placement
  • Half cohort will complete in semester 3 / half in
    semester 4

8
1. Student and Field Educator Orientation
9. CPP Placement Report
2. Student Submit Placement Preferences
  • Final Field Educator
  • Assessment

3. Students Allocated Placements
Completion of Project/Activities Outlined in LA
CPP Model 12 Weeks 78 hours
  • Students Interview with
  • Field Educators

7. FFLO Visits/Evaluation
5. Formulate learning Objectives Personal,
Field Educator, Community
6. Engage in activities
6. Integration Lecture
9
CPP Model 2006 Semester 4 - 2006
Semester Week Placement Day Day Date Notes
Week 1 NO CPP Week commencing Monday 17 Jul First week of semester. Students attend normal classes
Week 2 NO CPP Week commencing Monday 24 Jul On-campus activity Students attend CPP Briefing Lecture
Week 3 Day 1 Tuesday 1 Aug Students commence CPP Placement
Week 4 Day 2 Tuesday 8 Aug Student Field Educator prepare Learning Agreement
Week 5 Day 3 Tuesday 15 Aug Learning Agreement due Friday 18 August
Week 6 Day 4 Tuesday 22 Aug Faculty Field Liaison Officers contact Field Educator to request a field visit. Preparation for block placement
Week 7 Day 5 Tuesday 29 Aug Field visits begin. Block placement commences
Week 7 Day 6 Monday OR Wednesday 28 Aug OR 30 Aug Students in group U3, 4 5 attend placement Students in group U1, 2 6 attend placement
10
CPP Model 2006 Semester 4 2006 cont
Week 8 Day 7 Tuesday 5 Sep All students attend placement
Week 8 Day 8 Thursday 7 Sep All students attend placement
Week 8 Day 9 Monday OR Wednesday 4 Sep OR 6 Sep Students in group U3, 4 5 attend placement Students in group U1, 2 6 attend placement
Week 9 Day 10 Tuesday 12 Sep
Week 10 Day 11 Tuesday 19 Sep
Week 11 Day 12 Tues 3 Oct Final day of CPP
Week 12 Day 13 Tues 10 Oct Students work on their CPP Final Assessment on or off campus
Week 13 Friday 20 Oct Students submit Final CPP Placement Report
11
What are your expectations? Examples of
Community-based Projects/Activities
  • Health promotion
  • Working with ANTAR to better understand
    Indigenous health and access issues
  • Resettlement of refugees
  • Mentoring programs for youth
  • Working with the elderly in low care and high
    facilities social isolation, life books
  • Working with people with disabilities, developing
    care plans for people with ABI and Huntingtons
    disease
  • Working in drug and alcohol services Needle and
    syringe program, harm minimisation, detox
    services
  • Community health aged care, mental health,
    allied health
  • Researching and developing brochures outlining
    common medical issues and details of services
    available in the community for the homeless
  • Developing breakfast clubs for kids and high
    schools youth
  • Trained as crisis counsellors through Lifeline
  • Mentoring children in foster care or who are
    wards of the state
  • Evaluating the foster care system taking into
    consideration the role of carers
  • Development of a Food Co-operative in a public
    housing block which also led to the development
    of a funding proposal to sustain the continuity
    of the food co-operative for people who are
    marginalised in society
  • Addressing key mental health, grief, bullying,
    sex, drugs, and party culture issues in schools .

12
Supervision
  • As an agency supervisor try to reflect on four
    important questions before engagement in student
    teaching
  • What is my preferred learning style?
  • What content do I need to teach and how?
  • What is the student's preferred learning style?
  • Given the interaction of the student's preferred
    learning style, my own learning orientation, and
    the present teaching task, am I using the most
    appropriate teaching style for this educational
    process?

13
Links between learning style preference and
teaching style behaviour
  • As an active learner
  • As a conceptual learner
  • As an experiential learner
  • As a reflective learner
  • As an agency supervisor
  • Do I take a very active, leading role or do I
    become more inactive and expect the student to
    responsibly contribute their ideas or doubts?
  • Do I encourage risk-taking and creativity in
    students' thinking and actual work? Do I
    actively engage in assessing the learning
    environment of the agency and the interactive
    process of field instruction?
  • Do I help students to know when they may be
    lacking objectivity or blocking work progress?
  • Do I take a more active role in teaching and
    encourage students to observe my own work?

14
Reflective Practice (Donald Schön)
  • Reflective Practice involves thoughtfully
    considering ones own
  • experiences in applying knowledge to practice
    while being coached
  • by professionals in the discipline.
  • The basic premise is that practice is marked by
    uncertainty, uniqueness and value-conflict.
  • Experienced practitioners seem to know what to do
    - knowing-in-action.
  • When something happens, the practitioner is
    thinking about how to reshape the activity -
    reflection-in-action
  • Translate these actions into learning where the
    experienced practitioner who, acts as a mentor
    and educator
  • models reflection-in-action
  • Conducts a reflective conversation.

15
Reflective Practice Outcomes (Russell, 2005)
  • Recognise new ways of perceiving or thinking
    about the professional situation of practice
  • Stimulate a novel course of action and
  • Provide evidence for deciding if the new
    perspective and associated new actions deserved
    to be included in future professional practice.
  • References
  • Schon D. The reflective practitioner. How
    professionals think in action. New York. Basic
    Books, 1983.
  • Schon D. Educating the reflective practitioner.
    San Francisco Jossey-Bass, 1988.
  • Kottkamp RB. Means for facilitating reflection.
    Education and Urban Society 1990 22(2) 182-203.
  • Russell, T. Can reflective practice be taught?
    Reflective Practice May 2005 6(2), 199204.

16
Supervision
  • When and where?
  • Set a formal and regular supervision time
  • Document this as part of the Learning Agreement
    and Ongoing Supervision and Assessment (both
    available on the Website)
  • What to cover
  • Use the Learning Agreement as basis for
    discussion. This will incorporate
  • Personal and professional development of the
    student
  • Progress of key activities and tasks
  • Informal assessment and feedback on student
    learning
  • Expectations for future practice and performance
  • Any issues or concerns

17
Supervision
  • Difficulties between student and Supervisor
  • Follow guidelines in Handbook (page 7)
  • Personal reflection and counselling
  • Emotional reaction to a placement event or
    interaction
  • Formal debrief as part of supervision meeting
  • Supervisor should not enter the role of personal
    counsellor
  • Direct student to student support services listed
    in the handbook

18
Placement parameters
  • Attendance
  • Minimum of 78 hours over 12-weeks
  • See placement dates (Appendix J)
  • Reported on Supervisors Final Assessment
  • Absence and illness
  • Students are asked to contact you as soon as
    possible if they are unable to attend
  • Absence should be reported to the CPP Coordinator
    ASAP
  • Supporting documentation must be provided where
    minimum hours are not met

19
Placement parameters
  • Use of private or agency vehicles
  • Students must not transport clients under any
    circumstance
  • Not expected that students will use agency
    vehicles
  • Students may use their own vehicle to undertake
    visits
  • Agency Policy
  • Students sign a Consent Form acknowledging that
    agency policy and procedure applies while on
    placement

20
Student orientation Week 1
  • Understanding duty of care
  • Understanding confidentiality and privacy
  • Mandatory reporting
  • Professional behaviour
  • Outline your expectations
  • Presentation of Police Check
  • Working within agency policy
  • Start to discuss learning goals

21
The Learning Agreement CPP Day 3
  • Purpose
  • Plan for the next 12-weeks placed online
  • Practical and concise working document
  • Responsibility
  • Close consultation between student and Supervisor
  • When the supervisor is happy with the content,
    student to submit online (in the case where the
    on-line system is not working, a note will be put
    up on the Website)
  • They will receive online feedback from Faculty
  • Due end of the week of Day 3

22
The Learning Agreement Contd.
  • Key elements
  • Three learning goals
  • Personal and professional development of the
    student
  • Supervisors goal what do you want the student
    to take away from this experience?
  • Student contribution to the service / community
  • Activities / tasks relating to each goal
  • Timeline for completing activities / tasks

23
The Learning Agreement
  • Sample Learning Agreement
  • Review
  • Use during supervision sessions to track students
    progress
  • Change / amend as required

24
The Faculty Field Liaison visit Days 5-7
  • Purpose
  • To provide onsite guidance and support to
    students and Supervisors
  • Identify / assist in the resolution of any
    difficulties
  • Responsibility
  • The FFLO will contact you to arrange a suitable
    time around Day 4 (22nd August)
  • Format of meeting
  • Supervisor student Supervisor and student

25
The Faculty Field Liaison visit
  • Feedback
  • An evaluation form is submitted following the
    visit
  • CPP Coordinator will follow up on any identified
    issues
  • Used as part of overall program evaluation
  • Provided to Agency Coordinators

26
Completing Ongoing Assessment, Supervision and
Feedback
  • Purpose
  • Discussion of activities
  • Debriefing student at the end of the day
  • Planning for the next CPP day or mini-block
    placement
  • Review student progress
  • Evidence
  • Field Educators Monitoring and Assessment of
    Student Form
  • Incorporate changes to the Learning Agreement

27
and final term assessment Day 11/12
  • Purpose
  • Final review of student performance and learning
  • Completion of placement hours
  • Providing an overall recommendation on the
    successful completion of the placement
  • Evidence
  • Learning Agreement and Supervisor / staff /
    feedback
  • Field Educators monitoring and assessment of
    student

28
The Final Placement Report due week 13
  • Purpose
  • Capture placement experiences, initiatives,
    outcomes
  • Capture impact on personal and professional
    development of the student
  • Showcase any physical materials such as a
    brochure or presentation
  • Student should work on the report independently
    outside of placement hours
  • (see Page 19 in Handbook for greater detail)

29
Debrief
  • Student Debrief
  • Integration lecture
  • Lecture discussion during week 14
  • Complete a program evaluation
  • Supervisors feedback session
  • You will be invited to participate in a focus
    group session at the end of the year and provide
    feedback to the faculty on the program

30
Process for managing difficulties
  • Regular supervision session
  • Provision for a private discussion
  • Outline the specific concern
  • Specify your expectations
  • Identify, negotiate strategies to manage issue
  • Specify a date for review
  • Document agreement and provide a copy to the
    student
  • Notify CPP Coordinator

31
Managing difficulties
  • First review meeting
  • Have the expectations been met?
  • If not, contact the CPP Coordinator
  • Second review meeting
  • Meeting with CPP Faculty, student and Field
    Educator
  • Discussion on issues of concern
  • Review and agree an appropriate course of action
  • Set a date for review
  • CPP Faculty will document meeting and provide
    copies to Student and Field Educator
  • Agency Coordinator will be informed

32
Managing difficulties
  • Final review meeting
  • CPP Faculty will meet again with the student and
    Field Educator to discuss progress
  • If expectations have not been met
  • Issues regarding Student performance will be
    referred to the Associate Dean
  • Issues regarding the ability of the
    placement/Field Educator to meet expectations
    will be referred to the Agency Coordinator

33
Withdrawal from the placement
  • Should the student / field educator / CPP faculty
    recommend withdrawal from the placement
  • A meeting will be held to discuss the reasons for
    requesting withdrawal. If parties cannot agree
    on a pathway for resolving issues the student
    will be withdrawn
  • Student will be required to repeat CPP, or if
    completing in semester 4, repeat Year 2!

34
Summary of Roles and Responsibilities
  • Field Educator
  • Provide an orientation to the agency
  • Work with the student to complete the Learning
    Agreement
  • Identify and assign tasks which will
  • Be of benefit to the agency staff clients
    community
  • Allow student to address learning goals
  • Facilitate regular supervision sessions
  • Complete a ongoing and final CPP assessment of
    each student
  • Meet with the Faculty liaison officer to discuss
    the progress of the placement
  • Report any difficulties to the CPP Coordinator /
    FFLO as soon as possible

35
Summary of Roles and Responsibilities
  • Student
  • Take initiative!
  • Demonstrate professional attitudes and behaviour
  • Follow the guidance and direction of Supervisor
  • Complete a minimum of 78-hours on placement over
    12-weeks
  • Complete all assessment tasks and checklist items
    listed
  • Meet with the Faculty liaison officer
  • Work with the Field Educator, FFLO and/or faculty
    staff to resolve any placement difficulties in a
    timely manner

36
Summary of Roles and Responsibilities
  • Faculty Field Liaison Officer
  • Discuss learning goals with the Field Educator
    and student
  • Outline criteria for acceptable performance
  • Assess the progress of the placement
  • Complete a placement evaluation
  • Identify any difficulties and report these to the
    CPP Coordinator for follow up.

37
Summary of Roles and Responsibilities
  • CPP Academic Convenor
  • Academic leadership for the program
  • Managing academic progress and serious placement
    difficulties
  • CPP Coordinator
  • Overall coordination of program
  • Managing communication between all key
    stakeholders
  • Providing support and guidance to all key
    stakeholders
  • CPP Adviser
  • Providing guidance on student difficulties
  • Input into program development and implementation

38
CPP Evaluation
  • FFLO Evaluation
  • Final CPP Field Educator Evaluation of the
    program
  • Completed during focus group at end-of-year
  • Student Evaluation
  • Completed following final debriefing session

39
Positive Outcomes
  • Developed ability to engage with various target
    populations (elderly, kids, youth, etc)
  • Improved communication skills
  • Increased knowledge and awareness of social
    justice issues
  • Better understanding of a range of issues
  • Appreciation of varying value systems and beliefs
    including own
  • Increased awareness of personal values and the
    need to be non-judgemental as a professional.

40
Personally I was lucky and had a great placement
for the future, I believe most placements
should somewhat model on this one to maximise the
potential of CPP and embrace student enjoyment.
It offers interaction with clients, as well as an
understanding, not just computer interaction!
On reflection, many of my experiences and
encounters have transformed my impressions of
patient treatment and what it means to be a
doctor when treating patients with sensitive and
challenging social circumstances. It became
increasingly evident that treating a patient
spanned far beyond the provision of medications
and procedures. Many in society arent afforded
the same opportunities, therefore it seems
fundamental to patient treatment that doctors
have a firm understanding of the issues their
patients are facing. The skills developed at my
placement will hopefully benefit my outlook on
medical practice for years to come.
41
Indicators of success for CPP
  • Increased numbers of partnerships between Monash
    University and the community From 4 in 2003 to
    over 30 in 2006.
  • Mutually agreed upon CPP goal and objectives,
    operating principles, expectations
  • Clarity in communication, leadership, power
    sharing, decision-making
  • Sharing of roles community-based educators,
    co-learners, Faculty Field Liaisons role in
    community
  • Sustained commitment, willingness to learn
    together and collaborate for long-term
  • Evaluation responsiveness to all constituents --
    the community, faculty, students, and partnership
    itself.
  • Validation by Faculty and Partners including
    supervisors the merits and value of evaluation,
    that provides the evidence of action and results
    to be accepted.
  • Selected for the VCs Teaching in Excellence
    Showcase -2005.
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