4.3 Article

Clinical supervisors' and students' perspectives on preparedness for veterinary workplace clinical training: An international study

Journal

VETERINARY RECORD
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/vetr.3504

Keywords

clinical supervisors; preparedness; readiness; survey; veterinary students; workplace learning

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This study aimed to investigate whether there is alignment between students and supervisors regarding the preparedness characteristics for veterinary workplace clinical training (WCT). The findings revealed both similarities and differences between the two groups, providing insights for educators, curriculum developers, and admissions tutors to enhance student preparedness for workplace learning.
BackgroundThe alignment of student and workplace supervisors' perspectives on student preparedness for veterinary workplace clinical training (WCT) is unknown, yet misalignment could negatively impact workplace learning. The aim of this study was to quantify the relative importance of WCT preparedness characteristics according to students and supervisors and to identify differences.MethodsA survey was completed by 657 veterinary students and 244 clinical supervisors from 25 veterinary schools, from which rankings of the preparedness characteristics were derived. Significant rank differences were assessed using confidence intervals and permutation tests.Results'Honesty, integrity and dependability' was the most important characteristic according to both groups. The three characteristics with the largest rank differences were: students' awareness of their own and others' mental wellbeing and the importance of self-care; being willing to try new practical skills with support (students ranked both of these higher); and having a clinical reasoning framework for common problems (supervisors ranked higher).LimitationsUsing pooled data from many schools means that the results are not necessarily representative of the perspectives at any one institution.ConclusionThere are both similarities and differences in the perspectives of students and supervisors regarding which characteristics are more important for WCT. This provides insights that can be used by educators, curriculum developers and admissions tutors to improve student preparedness for workplace learning.

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