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Adult Self-Directed Learning: Setting Your Own Agenda

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 03:40 authored by Richard HaysRichard Hays
Medical education often uses terms like ‘adult learning’ and ‘self-directed learning’. We are told that we trained to be self-directed and adult learners from the commencement of basic medical education and that this is important if we are to remain competent over a career that may span 30–40 years. However, the ability to be an adult or self-directed learner is difficult to measure and it is therefore difficult to determine whether these processes (or are they skills?) are either innate or learnable. There is a risk that the terms are seen simply as impractical educational jargon, and so education organizations feel safest when they provide a tightly structured curriculum and assess learners through examinations based on that curriculum. The Postgraduate Medical Education Training Board has required this for all postgraduate specialties, including general practice. The obvious question then is ‘what happens next?’ as there is no such thing as a curriculum for lifelong competence. There is therefore a need for GP registrars, as part of the new RCGP curriculum, to develop the skills to be lifelong learners for two reasons. The first is to facilitate maintaining currency of practice and the second is to role model that for other learners. This paper aims to explain in simple terms how, in the context of being on the pathway to becoming an independent general practitioner, the theory can be applied to enhance adult and self-directed learning in GP registrars.

History

Publication title

InnovAiT

Issue

7

Pagination

434-438

ISSN

1755-7380

Department/School

Tasmanian School of Medicine

Publisher

Sage Publications Ltd.

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Rights statement

Copyright 2009 The Author

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Health policy evaluation

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