Student learning about UK health services in a cross-border curriculum partnership; the London-Cyprus experience

MedEdPublish (2016). 2020 Mar 30:9:58. doi: 10.15694/mep.2020.000058.1. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Purpose of the article Cross border partnerships require curricula, faculty and students to negotiate challenges associated with national regulatory frameworks, contexts and cultures. This study investigated student attitude and behaviours when encountering learning about health services in host and home students in the context of problem based learning. Materials and Methods First year graduate entry students' health systems interest and exposure and their perceptions of the dynamics of learning in PBL were investigated via a questionnaire comprising open and closed questions. Results and Conclusions Results showed a difference between home and host students in the ways they learned about home health systems and their attitudes to the value of learning about home and international health systems. There was no difference in the quantity of health service related learning objectives generated. Both groups reported noticing differences between the PBL cases and clinical practice, however, perceptions of the reasons for the differences varied between home and host students. We are interested in the way in which this perception of difference was reported as either a stimulus or a barrier to learning.

Keywords: Crossborder curriculum partnerships; Health Services and education; International medical education; Problem-based learning.