1. REAPing the benefits: development and use of a structured evaluation framework to codify learning resources for Global Health professionals
- Author
-
Meike Schleiff, Lillian James, Elizabeth Hahn, Anant Mishra, Caroline Dolive, and Bhakti Hansoti
- Subjects
Process (engineering) ,Health Personnel ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Assessment ,Global Health ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Vetting ,On demand ,Global health ,Humans ,Learning ,eLearning ,Quality (business) ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pace ,media_common ,Competency ,Medical education ,LC8-6691 ,030503 health policy & services ,Flexibility (personality) ,General Medicine ,Faculty ,Special aspects of education ,Leadership ,Medicine ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The learning opportunities for global health professionals have expanded rapidly in recent years. The diverse array of learners and wide range in course quality underscore the need for an improved course vetting process to better match learners with appropriate learning opportunities. Methods We developed a framework to assess overall course quality by determining performance across four defined domains Relevance, Engagement, Access, and Pedagogy (REAP). We applied this framework across a learning catalogue developed for participants enrolled in the Sustaining Technical and Analytic Resources (STAR) project, a global health leadership training program. Results The STAR learning activities database included a total of 382 courses, workshops, and web-based resources which fulfilled 531 competencies across three levels: core, content, and skill. Relevance: The majority of activities were at an understanding or practicing level across all competency domains (486/531, 91.5%). Engagement: Many activities lacked any peer engagement (202/531, 38.0%) and had limited to no faculty engagement (260/531, 49.0%). Access: The plurality of courses across competencies were offered on demand (227/531, 42.7%) and were highly flexible in pace (240/531, 45.2%). Pedagogy: Of the activities that included an assessment, most matched activity learning objectives (217/531, 40.9%). Conclusions Through applying REAP to the STAR project learning catalogue, we found many online activities lacked meaningful engagement with faculty and peers. Further development of structured online activities providing learners with flexibility in access, a range of levels of advancement for content, and opportunities to engage and apply learning are needed for the field of global health.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF