Abstract

BackgroundThere is a growing discontent within the health care industry regarding the state of preparedness of graduates to adequately function in a dynamic work environment. It is therefore required of higher education institutions to equip graduates with skills beyond disciplinary expertise, which would allow them to function optimally in work environments. This study presents a team dissection project that incorporates graduate attributes in an undergraduate first-year anatomy course for the medical orthotics and prosthetics program.MethodFocus group interviews with students (n = 23) were used to demonstrate the achievement of graduate attributes by aligning student perceptions of the dissection project with graduate attributes and indicators thereof.ResultsStudents were positive about the effectiveness of the dissection project in enforcing anatomical knowledge; ensuring active engagement with human material; enhancing communication skills and teamwork; and increasing sensitivity towards cultural diversity. These views related largely to those graduate attributes which engage students towards becoming active and reflective learners; creative thinkers; independent and collaborative workers; effective communicators; and culturally and socially aware citizens. Areas of dissatisfaction included challenges with the use of technology for the video preparation; repetition of presentations and large dissection teams.ConclusionThere is an emerging view that graduate attributes be integrated as early as possible into program curricula so as to become intrinsic in a student’s academic and professional development. Through the expansion of a dissection project forming part of a subject taught very early on in a program’s curriculum, the integration of graduate attributes and discipline-specific competencies are highlighted.

Highlights

  • There is a growing discontent within the health care industry regarding the state of preparedness of graduates to adequately function in a dynamic work environment

  • Students were positive about the effectiveness of the dissection project in enforcing anatomical knowledge; ensuring active engagement with human material; enhancing communication skills and teamwork; and increasing sensitivity towards cultural diversity

  • Assessment results of the dissection project are presented as evidence of achievement of graduate attributes. This was a qualitative and explorative study, conducted on first year students registered for Anatomy I in the Medical Orthotics and Prosthetics program

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Summary

Introduction

There is a growing discontent within the health care industry regarding the state of preparedness of graduates to adequately function in a dynamic work environment. Employers maintain that emerging graduates, while usually skilled in the subject and career-specific knowledge, lack competencies that would enable them to transform and adapt in their organizations [1,2,3,4,5]. These competencies, popularized as graduate attributes, comprise a set of generic outcomes intended to underpin qualifications and have become increasingly important in higher education [6]. Such an integration creates an opportunity for foundational disciplines to explore innovative approaches of embedding graduate attributes within the backdrop of discipline-specific needs and challenges

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