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Teaching and educational scholarship in Tanzania: faculty initiative to improve performance of health professions’ students

Teaching and educational scholarship in Tanzania: faculty initiative to improve performance of health professions’ students
Teaching and educational scholarship in Tanzania: faculty initiative to improve performance of health professions’ students
Well-educated and competent health professionals influence the health system in which they work to improve health outcomes, through clinical care and community interventions, and by raising standards of practice and supervision. To prepare these individuals, training institutions must ensure that their faculty members, who design and deliver education, are effective teachers. We describe the experience of the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in encouraging improvements in the teaching capacity of its faculty and postgraduate students triggered by a major institutional transition to competency-based education. We employed a multi-stage process that started by identifying the teaching and learning needs and challenges of MUHAS students and faculty. Collaborating with the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), MUHAS responded to these needs by introducing faculty to competency-based curricula and later to strategies for long term continuing improvement. We demonstrate that teaching faculty members are keen for local institutional support to enable them to enhance their skills as educators, and that they have been able to sustain a program of faculty development for their peers.
faculty development, teaching, assessment, competencies, Tanzania, health professions education
0197-5897
S150-S170
Mkony, Charles A.
4368e3a4-a5fe-4539-8211-09cbafa3ce8b
O'Sullivan, Patricia S.
0f2b539e-2c50-4381-9d6e-4429a427880c
Owibingire, Sirra S.
5c6984f7-414a-498b-9361-1cd942651e79
Fyfe, Molly V.
e17f78fe-fac8-42fd-bfd8-03d8031aaf07
Omer, Selma
c1a560b1-9b1f-4feb-8cda-555643ff9265
Freeman, Phyllis
c89acc85-327d-480c-a26f-cf9d45b7fae4
Makubi, Abel
a590c8b2-00de-4f50-867f-c7adb1c23e38
Mloka, Doreen A.
7ea08c11-8bfb-46c8-8334-8c57cc645e90
Portillo, Carmen J.
15a67fc5-e8fa-464e-8706-8234bde0b23c
Leyna, Germana H.
bcd9a65f-2ffb-4d47-be37-d9b1682d6f64
Tarimo, Edith
adc263ca-9f25-49ca-80dd-c40daa06fb60
Kaaya, Ephata E.
41998052-dcb9-49fa-91e8-7c0d8e49d89f
Macfarlane, Sarah B.
ef37f7ea-2964-4598-ad77-e06f66c84a2c
Mkony, Charles A.
4368e3a4-a5fe-4539-8211-09cbafa3ce8b
O'Sullivan, Patricia S.
0f2b539e-2c50-4381-9d6e-4429a427880c
Owibingire, Sirra S.
5c6984f7-414a-498b-9361-1cd942651e79
Fyfe, Molly V.
e17f78fe-fac8-42fd-bfd8-03d8031aaf07
Omer, Selma
c1a560b1-9b1f-4feb-8cda-555643ff9265
Freeman, Phyllis
c89acc85-327d-480c-a26f-cf9d45b7fae4
Makubi, Abel
a590c8b2-00de-4f50-867f-c7adb1c23e38
Mloka, Doreen A.
7ea08c11-8bfb-46c8-8334-8c57cc645e90
Portillo, Carmen J.
15a67fc5-e8fa-464e-8706-8234bde0b23c
Leyna, Germana H.
bcd9a65f-2ffb-4d47-be37-d9b1682d6f64
Tarimo, Edith
adc263ca-9f25-49ca-80dd-c40daa06fb60
Kaaya, Ephata E.
41998052-dcb9-49fa-91e8-7c0d8e49d89f
Macfarlane, Sarah B.
ef37f7ea-2964-4598-ad77-e06f66c84a2c

Mkony, Charles A., O'Sullivan, Patricia S., Owibingire, Sirra S., Fyfe, Molly V., Omer, Selma, Freeman, Phyllis, Makubi, Abel, Mloka, Doreen A., Portillo, Carmen J., Leyna, Germana H., Tarimo, Edith, Kaaya, Ephata E. and Macfarlane, Sarah B. (2012) Teaching and educational scholarship in Tanzania: faculty initiative to improve performance of health professions’ students. Journal of Public Health Policy, 33, supplement 1, S150-S170. (doi:10.1057/jphp.2012.45). (PMID:23254841)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Well-educated and competent health professionals influence the health system in which they work to improve health outcomes, through clinical care and community interventions, and by raising standards of practice and supervision. To prepare these individuals, training institutions must ensure that their faculty members, who design and deliver education, are effective teachers. We describe the experience of the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in encouraging improvements in the teaching capacity of its faculty and postgraduate students triggered by a major institutional transition to competency-based education. We employed a multi-stage process that started by identifying the teaching and learning needs and challenges of MUHAS students and faculty. Collaborating with the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), MUHAS responded to these needs by introducing faculty to competency-based curricula and later to strategies for long term continuing improvement. We demonstrate that teaching faculty members are keen for local institutional support to enable them to enhance their skills as educators, and that they have been able to sustain a program of faculty development for their peers.

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Published date: 2012
Keywords: faculty development, teaching, assessment, competencies, Tanzania, health professions education
Organisations: Medical Education

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 388286
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/388286
ISSN: 0197-5897
PURE UUID: e436948c-7769-47fa-bc21-e0d735568e8f

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Date deposited: 23 Feb 2016 10:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:55

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Contributors

Author: Charles A. Mkony
Author: Patricia S. O'Sullivan
Author: Sirra S. Owibingire
Author: Molly V. Fyfe
Author: Selma Omer
Author: Phyllis Freeman
Author: Abel Makubi
Author: Doreen A. Mloka
Author: Carmen J. Portillo
Author: Germana H. Leyna
Author: Edith Tarimo
Author: Ephata E. Kaaya
Author: Sarah B. Macfarlane

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