Title: Setting off
1(No Transcript)
2Setting off
There was maybe an external driver, team work,
but at the same time we introduced a common
course architecture everything went into
modules, some of which could be shared across
courses so we tried for shared learning - a
natural extension along with the natural
environmental situation There was also an
opportunity to get funding . Unfortunately they
didnt fund us but we decided to go ahead anyway
- Impetus and opportunity
- The art of the possible
- From shared learning to IPE
3Keeping going
- In a faculty board meeting, IPE sits as an
agenda item so you update etc. but when you come
to a sticky bit the chair will say well you need
to link with programme leads to make that happen,
when you try to contact them its not a direct
No but its as though its fudged to the extent
that they have used their professional knowledge
of their programme to be able to justify why
were already doing it or some other excuse
like treacle.
- Getting buy in from staff and managers
- Listening to students
- Marriages, separations, hard work (and money)
4Shoehorning and squeezing
- from uni perspective we are going from 20, 40,
80 to a 15, 30, 60 credit system to bring us in
line with other unis. This is being used as a
reason to examine curricula again, NM being done
first, AHPs and SW will go though this in the
next 4 years - Trying to keep going, when youve got so many
drivers and revalidation at different points,
keeping an ipe thread is problematic. You need IP
champions in the curriculum, by default the
module leaders become the IP champions, but you
have to keep banging the ipe drum.
5Vulnerabilities 1 Research
- We have put in some HEA bids for IPL not
successful. Got some internal funding but
other demands taken precedence over research and
publications - No one here doing any research into IP
working - I have been told my IP stuff wont be entered in
faculty REF because IP is not a priority for the
faculty ... theres no educational research
included in faculty priorities, money for our
previous research came from workforce development
money
6Vulnerabilities 2 Practice
- In 2001 we started with 5 week placements
couldnt sustain this - The training ward collapsed after 3 years not
sustainable from staff perspective and for
students - It hasnt been possible to provide IPE in
practice, we want to try again, but without
putting an added burden on overworked mentors - The context out there a very varied workforce
and workers who cannot guarantee the importance
of IP working very variable quality of IP for
students to learn from complex cultural issues
in work setting - We could equip students with IP frameworks, e.g.
capabilities and work with that in practice, but
managed by uni rather than practice our
documents are not that far ahead to have mentors
facilitating student experience IP practice
learning
7Misalignments
- (Re)validation
- We went through every disciplines documents,
and IPL is in every one but may need
translating for the educators and you are
competing with all the other requirements in the
documents. - Im uncomfortable in saying this but effect of
staying in same revalidation process is that it
was another year and a half of meetings etc to
make sure validation and QAA happened - Assessment of students
- For some courses IPE is mandatory re
attendance . Each course has different
approaches, different sanctions OTs - have competency statements re multi-disciplinary
practice but not other students, medicine have a
different placement management process
8Lining up
- Professions and faculties
- Regulatory requirements
- Assessment
- Practice learning
- Validation procedures and revalidation cycles
- Recognition (and reward) for IP facilitation
- Policies promoting the conditions for IPE across
the UK
9Creating, recreating and listening hard
- Learning from lives shut down a few years ago
due to curriculum development in the medical
school. Everyone loved it but it was a fixed
module that took everybody, medical students had
rotations of 30, plus 200 sw twice per year. GMC
increased exams and these needed to be end of 1st
semester. Wanted to drop the disability content
into other parts of the curriculum. But we lost
it and all those involved in practice got
involved in newer bits of ipe. Now looking at
community hospitals for other students to join up
with medics there. - An example of adapting creatively to changing
curricula