Partners in academic endeavour: Characterising student engagement across internationally excellent medical schools

There is increasing interest in how student engagement can be enhanced in medical schools: not just engagement with learning but with broader academic practices such as curriculum development, research, organisational leadership, and community involvement. To foster evidence-based practice, it is im...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical teacher 2023-08, Vol.45 (8), p.830-837
Hauptverfasser: Freitas, Flávia, Leedham-Green, Kathleen E., Smith, Susan F., Costa, Manuel João
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container_title Medical teacher
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creator Freitas, Flávia
Leedham-Green, Kathleen E.
Smith, Susan F.
Costa, Manuel João
description There is increasing interest in how student engagement can be enhanced in medical schools: not just engagement with learning but with broader academic practices such as curriculum development, research, organisational leadership, and community involvement. To foster evidence-based practice, it is important to understand how institutions from diverse sociocultural contexts achieve excellence in student engagement. We analysed 11 successful applications for an international award in student engagement and interviewed nine key informants from five medical schools across four continents, characterising how and why student engagement was fostered at these institutions. Document analysis revealed considerable consensus on the core practices of student engagement, as well as innovative and creative practices often in response to local strengths and challenges. The interviews uncovered the importance of an authentic partnership culture between students and faculty which sustained mutually beneficial enhancements across multiple domains. Faculty promoted, welcomed, and acted on student inputs, and students reported greater willingness to participate if they could see the benefits. These combined to create self-perpetuating virtuous cycles of academic endeavour. Successful strategies included having participatory values actively reinforced by senior leadership, engagement activities that are driven by both students and staff, and focusing on strategies with reciprocal benefits for all stakeholders.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Education Source
subjects Community involvement
Curricula
Curriculum development
Evidence Based Practice
Evidence based research
Leadership
Learner Engagement
learning environment
Medical schools
partnership approaches
Sociocultural factors
Student engagement
Student participation
Students
title Partners in academic endeavour: Characterising student engagement across internationally excellent medical schools
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