4.1 Article

Cultural Competence is Everyone's Business: Embedding Cultural Competence in Curriculum Frameworks to Advance Veterinary Education

Journal

JOURNAL OF VETERINARY MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 1-14

Publisher

UNIV TORONTO PRESS INC
DOI: 10.3138/jvme-2021-0113

Keywords

cultural competence; curricular design; learning outcomes; professional practice; cultural diversity; reflective practice

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Cultural competence is crucial in veterinary and research practice, as it can impact animal health, welfare, and research outcomes. The authors introduced a comprehensive curriculum framework in the University of Sydney veterinary program to cultivate cultural competence in students, achieving integration through aligned learning outcomes, teaching activities, and assessment.
Cultural competence in professional and research practice is important to effectively deliver animal and One Health services and programs. Veterinarians work with culturally and linguistically diverse teams, clients, and communities. Cultural perspectives on the significance and perceptions of animals and differences in consultation and engagement protocols and strategies can influence client-practitioner and researcher-community relationships, impacting animal health, welfare, and/or research outcomes. Curricula have been proposed to build cultural capacity in graduates, but these have not been reported in veterinary programs, and early attempts to integrate cultural competency into the University of Sydney veterinary curriculum lacked a formal structure and were ad hoc with respect to implementation. To address this, the authors introduced a broad curriculum framework into the University of Sydney veterinary program, which defines cultural competence, perceptions of animals, effective communication, and community engagement in a range of contexts. Cultural competency learning outcomes were described for units of study. These were contextually relevant and aligned to course learning outcomes and University of Sydney graduate qualities. Constructive alignment was achieved by linking learning outcomes to teaching and learning activities and assessment. The continuum of cultural competency underpinned mapping of cultural competency across the curriculum with staged, vertical integration of key principles. Additionally, action to engage staff, students, and stakeholders in a cultural competence agenda assisted in sustaining curriculum change. The result was integration of cultural competency across the curriculum aligning with recommendations from accrediting bodies and with best practice models in medicine, nursing, and allied health programs.

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