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PRACTITIONER-RESEARCHER  May 2014

PRACTITIONER-RESEARCHER May 2014

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Subject:

Liz Wolvaardt's doctoral thesis/EJOLTS

From:

Jack Whitehead <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Practitioner-Researcher <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 19 May 2014 17:34:40 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

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text/plain (39 lines)

Congratulations to Liz Wolvaardt for the award of her doctorate for her practitioner-research on:

"Over the conceptual horizon of public health : a living theory of teaching undergraduate medical students"

Liz is Senior lecturer and Head of Health Policy and Management in the School of Health Systems and Public Health
in the University of Pretoria. Liz's doctorate was supervised by Dr. Pieter du Toit at the University of Pretoria.  Liz graduated from the University of Pretoria earlier this year. 

You can access the Abstract from http://repository.up.ac.za/handle/2263/39798 - the Institutional Repository of the University of Pretoria.  From there you can download Liz's thesis. It took me some 8 minutes with my broadband connection. 

Here is the Abstract:

"The health needs of society extend beyond the treatment of the individual and the ill. These needs are at the core of public health which addresses health at a population-level. Regulations dictate that public health must be included in the South African medical curriculum, but healthy populations hold little interest for medical students. As a result public health remains over the conceptual horizon of medical students.

 At the University of Pretoria the responsibility for the inclusion of public health is the responsibility of the School of Health Systems and Public Health. Participation in the medical curriculum is a minor but important part of my educational practice. But two of my professional values – care and agency – have been denied in that practice. The central purpose of the research was to construct the meaning of my educational practice with the aim of progressive realisation of my values.

 The study explored how public health is conceptualised as a subject in the medical curriculum at the University of Pretoria, the intended educational achievements of public health in the curriculum and the optimal strategies for its inclusion.

 An action research living theory design made use of a concurrent embedded mixed-methods approach. Data was gathered primarily from external experts, the academic staff of the School of Medicine and the SHSPH, key academic documents and the medical students.

 A constructivist grounded theory approach was employed to construct meaning from the findings. The findings revealed the effect of the historical decision to split public health and medicine and the resulting increasing distance between the disciplines. Resting on this fractured foundation is the understanding of what public health is. The understanding of public health suggests a multiple concurrent understanding that is constructed by diverse and seemingly conflicting perspectives while the discipline remains identifiable as public health.

 The curricular intentions of including public health in the medical curriculum at the University of Pretoria are characterised by a varied topography that includes externally and internally imposed educational tensions, constraints and intractable contradictions. Curricular intentions revolve around ontological aspirations. The medical students’
 perspectives of their educational experience in public health are surprisingly similar to those of students in other countries.

 The current and imagined strategies to include public health formed the basis for the scepticism of educational orthodoxy and suggested the exploration of the dual uncontested spaces – social media and the elective experience in the medical curriculum. The findings from my innovative practice in using the elective experience challenge the notion that public health is over the conceptual horizon of medical students. A theme that runs through the narrative suggests, instead, that other conceptual horizons obscure meaningful engagement with medical students around public health.

 This research is a rich account of my complex context and my connected practice and through action research I claim to live my values of care and agency. My living theory of practice as a form of meaning making could help others to look over their own conceptual horizons in search of wholeness."

My own view is that this research project adds new knowledge and insights to the subject of undergraduate medical education, whilst have wider implications for the generation of living theories in higher education. It has the potential to transform the teaching of public health in medical education.  I'm delighted to see the thesis on the web and I am hopeful that colleagues in our practitioner-researcher community will help to give the thesis a wide dissemination. The thesis suggests interesting pathways for further research, especially in relation to the educational benefits of encouraging medical students and other medical practitioners to generate their own living theories of their influence in enhancing public health. 

Congratulations to Marie Huxtable and the Editorial Board of the Educational Journal Of Living Theories for the updates to the homepage at:

http://ejolts.net

I think Marie asked us to browse through the December 2013 issue of EJOLTS at http://ejolts.net/node/209 rather than the December 2014 issue as the December 2014 is in preparation! The June 2014 issue is on track and I'm sure Marie will send round the url as soon as it is ready.


Love Jack.

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