Keith Stevenson, Chris Seenan, Gordon Morlan, Wendy Smith
Inter-professional education (IPE) has ‘learning to work effectively in inter-professional teams’ as one of its central learning outcomes. Whilst much is made in IPE of allocating health and social care students into inter-professional teams and setting them a task to complete, it has proved difficult to find a fair and equitable method of assessing how effective each individual has been in contributing to the task. This difficulty is compounded when the module is delivered predominantly online. This paper describes the recent push to establish meaningful educational outcomes for those involved in delivering IPE to pre-registration health and social care students. It then describes the use of a web-based peer assessment tool (Web PA) developed at Lough borough and Hull Universities (UK) which has been adapted by Glasgow Caledonian University (UK) for assessing the outcome of contributing effectively to IPE related online group tasks. The paper outlines how the process of web-based peer assessment operates in theory and how it has been received in practice. An illustration is given that shows how the process successfully discriminates between those that are working effectively in inter-professional teams and those that are not. The value of the process is discussed.
Quality in Primary Care
Volume:20 Issue:3
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