Title: Unit 1: Inter-professional and Adult Learning
1Unit 1 Inter-professional and Adult
Learning
- Aim
- Explore the concept of inter-professional
learning - Provide an overview of adult learning and its
application within practice - Learning outcomes
- Describe the key elements of inter-professional
learning - Discuss the benefits and challenges of
inter-professional learning - Describe key elements of adult learning theories
2Group introductions
- Reason for attending course
- Icebreaker
- Experiences of inter-professional learning
- Ground rules
- Review of aims and learning outcomes
3Inter-professional Education Centre for the
Advancement of Interprofessional Education(CAIPE)
- "Inter-professional education occurs when two or
more professions learn with, from and about each
other to improve collaboration and the quality of
care" (CAIPE 2002). - CAIPE uses the term "inter-professional
education" (IPE) to include all such learning in
academic and work based settings before and after
qualification, adopting an inclusive view of
professional. Â - www.caipe.org.uk/resources/principles-of-interprof
essional-education/
4Context
- Modern healthcare often provided by a variety of
disciplines working together - Therefore, at least some our professional
development and learning should be experienced
together - Potential for inter-professional to improve
collaborative working through shared learning - Extreme consequences of situations where
professions do not collaborate have been
highlighted in recent years
5Principles of Inter-professional Education
(CAIPE)
- Values
- Respects individuality, difference and diversity
within and between professions - Sustains the identity and expertise of each
profession - Process
- Encourages student participation in planning,
progressing and evaluating their learning - Enables the professions to learn with, from and
about each other to optimise exchange of
experience and expertise - Outcomes
- Engenders interprofessional capability
- Enhances practice within each profession
- www.caipe.org.uk/resources/principles-of-interpr
ofessional-education/
6Group Discussion
- What are the benefits of IPL and to whom?
- What challenges does IPL bring and for whom?
- Thinking about inter-professional learning you
have delivered or experienced why did it go
well or badly? - Group consensus of key elements of IPL
7What is Learning ?http//www.learningandteaching.
info/learning/whatlearn.htm
- What is taught is not the same as what is
learned.
8We all see things differently
9We are organised differently
10We go about doing things differently
but usually end up in the same place
11This is because our brains are wired-up in a
way which is unique to us and our experiences!
12Theories of Learning-Humanistic
- Focus on adult learning
- Value driven
- Natural desire to learn
- Learners are empowered and have control over the
learning process - Teacher relinquishes authority and becomes a
facilitator
13Pedagogy and Andragogy
14Adult Learners(Brookfield 1986)
- Not beginners in a continuing process of growth
- Bring a package of experiences and values each
unique - Come to education with intentions
- Bring expectations about the learning process
- Have competing interests the realities of their
lives - Have their own set patterns of learning
15Key Features of Productive Adult Learning (
Rogers 2001)
- Conducive climate established
- Learning activities relevant to circumstances
- Learners past experiences used in process
- Engagement of learner in design of process
- Encourage learner to be self-directed
- Educator facilitative rather than didactic
- Individual learners needs and styles taken into
account - The purpose of adult education is to help them
to learn, not to teach them all they know and
thus stop them from carrying on learning.Rogers
2001
16Andragogy (Knowles 1978)
- Adults
- need to know why they need to learn
- need to learn experientially
- approach learning as problem solving
- learn best when the topic is of immediate
value
17Andragogy (Knowles 1978)
- Instruction for adults needs to focus more on the
process and less on the content being taught. - Strategies such as case studies, role playing and
self evaluation are useful. - Instructors adopt role of facilitator or resource
rather than lecturer
18Adult Learning-Motivation
- Intrinsic motivation
- doing something for its own sake
- enthusiasm, commitment, desire
- Extrinsic motivation
- doing something for some other reason in order
to gain award or avoid negative consequences - co-operates
19Types of learning
- Surface Learning
- Learning by rote and memorising facts without
necessarily putting into perspective and often
imposed - Deep Learning
- Understanding meaning, interactive with content,
relates to new ideas and builds on previous
knowledge and relates to evidence and logic - Strategic
- Learning for exams. Finds out how to answer
questions in order to plan how to pass.
20Levels of motivation (Maslow 1987)http//www.lear
ningandteaching.info/learning/motivation.htmLevel
s of Motivation
21Educational Hierarchy
- AUTONOMY Confident in self and able to take
control of own learning, job direction, other
interests etc. - SELF ESTEEM Comfortable with developed registrar
status and copes with uncertainty, has balance
between professional
and private life etc. - RECOGNITION Copes with criticism, looks for new
ideas and
experiences, confidence increasing in softer
GP topics etc. - CONFIDENCE Increasingly able to work with team,
deal with social
issues, needs assess and bonds with trainer etc.
- SAFETY Asks for help, increasingly competent
with basics,
benefits from trainers help and support - SURVIVAL Getting bearings and learning basics
whilst
identifying own personality etc.
22The Process of Transitionhttp//www.businessball
s.com/freepdfmaterials/processoftransitionJF2012.p
df
23Group Discussion
- How do these theories relate to you as a learner
and to the learning environment? - How do you create a positive learning
environment? - What other theories do you like or use?
- How are these theories useful and how can we
apply them ?