ABSTRACT
Objective. To explore preceptors' perceptions about the performance of undergraduate pharmacy students during experiential placements in Australia, before and after curricular transformation.Methods. Using a semi-structured approach, we interviewed 26 preceptors who had recently supervised students who took part in the transformed curriculum and students from the previous curriculum. A directed content analysis approach was used to analyze the transcripts.Results. Preceptors described students from the transformed curriculum as having improved professional skills, behaviors, and attitudes and as having an increased ability to perform clinical activities compared to students of the previous curriculum. Preceptors also perceived that students in the transformed curriculum had improved clinical knowledge and knowledge application. They less frequently expressed that students in the transformed curriculum had lower-than-expected knowledge levels.Conclusion. The results of this study suggest that curricular transformation with a focus on skill-based and active learning can improve the performance of pharmacy students in terms of their professional behaviors and attitudes, skills, knowledge, and clinical abilities, as perceived by preceptors.
Subject(s)
Education, Pharmacy , Students, Pharmacy , Humans , Education, Pharmacy/methods , Curriculum , Problem-Based Learning/methods , Pharmacists , PreceptorshipABSTRACT
The pharmacy degree at Monash University is a four year undergraduate Bachelor of Pharmacy with Honours (BPharm(Hons)), followed by a one year Master of Pharmacy incorporating a preregistration year of supervised practice, known in Australia as internship. The first cohort of the BPharm(Hons) will graduate in 2020. A key principle of the new curriculum was that clinical experiential placements should commence early in the curriculum, be fully integrated with the didactic curriculum, and prepare students for internship by developing their competence in performing useful and relevant tasks in the workplace. Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA) are used as the framework for their experiences.