Abstract

Health professional education is experiencing a cultural shift towards student-centered education. Although we are now challenging our traditional training methods, our methods for evaluating the impact of the training on the learner remains largely unchanged. What is not typically measured is student-centered value; whether it was ‘worth’ what the learner paid. The primary aim of this study was to apply a method of calculating student-centered value, applied to the context of a change in teaching methods within a health professional program. This study took place over the first semester of the third year of the Bachelor of Physiotherapy at Monash University, Victoria, Australia, in 2014. The entire third year cohort (n = 78) was invited to participate. Survey based design was used to collect the appropriate data. A blended learning model was implemented; subsequently students were only required to attend campus three days per week, with the remaining two days comprising online learning. This was compared to the previous year’s format, a campus-based face-to-face approach where students attended campus five days per week, with the primary outcome—Value to student. Value to student incorporates, user costs associated with transportation and equipment, the amount of time saved, the price paid and perceived gross benefit. Of the 78 students invited to participate, 76 completed the post-unit survey (non-participation rate 2.6%). Based on Value to student the blended learning approach provided a $1,314.93 net benefit to students. Another significant finding was that the perceived gross benefit for the blended learning approach was $4014.84 compared to the campus-based face-to-face approach of $3651.72, indicating that students would pay more for the blended learning approach. This paper successfully applied a novel method of calculating student-centered value. This is the first step in validating the value to student outcome. Measuring economic value to the student may be used as a way of evaluating effective change in a modern health professional curriculum. This could extend to calculate total value, which would incorporate the economic implications for the educational providers. Further research is required for validation of this outcome.

Highlights

  • IntroductionHealth professional education is experiencing a cultural shift towards student-centered education, which focuses on how the student understands the material [2]

  • There is a need for improved efficiency and effectiveness of health workforce education and training to address significant workforce shortages [1]

  • This could extend to calculate total value, which would incorporate the economic implications for the educational providers

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Summary

Introduction

Health professional education is experiencing a cultural shift towards student-centered education, which focuses on how the student understands the material [2]. This provides the learner an opportunity for greater autonomy and responsibility for their learning, and requires that the academic understands how the student learns, is invested in the process of their learning rather than the transfer of information, and is concerned about the actual process of learning happening in the students [2,3]. Evaluation of teaching units is important for informing the ongoing search for quality, ensuring competitiveness amongst educational providers, within undergraduate physiotherapy programs in Australia, and ensuring program sustainability and accountability in an increasingly challenging economic climate. What is not typically measured is student-centered value; whether it was ‘worth’ what the learner paid, and using this measure to inform change in practice

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