Allied Health Professions Accreditation Standards for Work Integrated Learning: A Document Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Definitions of Work Integrated Learning
1.2. The Accreditation and Benefits of WIL
1.3. Our Research
2. Methods
2.1. Allied Health Professions Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
- The education program is provided by an Australian university, at Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) Level 7 or higher, and is eligible for accreditation by the relevant national accreditation body;
- The program curriculum includes a WIL component that involves significant service user/client/patient interaction;
- The AH practitioner has a direct patient care and treatment role;
- The profession has robust and enforceable regulatory mechanisms;
- The profession has clearly articulated national competency standards;
- The profession has a national professional organisation with a code of ethics/conduct and clearly defined membership requirements.
2.2. Document Analysis
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Allied Health Professions
3.2. Terms and Descriptions
- “Work integrated learning” was used in the standards of four professions: Chinese medicine, paramedicine, medical radiation practice and podiatry. Dietetics used the closely related term workplace learning, while also using professional placements. Paramedicine makes reference to the TEQSA definition of work-integrated learning: “…any arrangement where students undertake learning in a work context as part of their course requirements” [7] (p. 1), although it is noted that paramedicine specifically states that the learning occurs in a workplace external to the education institution. This discrepancy may be due to a recent update of the TEQSA Guidance Note. Chinese medicine, podiatry and medical radiation practice refer to work-integrated learning as being an “umbrella” term, which includes a range of approaches and environments that permit the integration of theory with practice. Furthermore, the environments can be both internal and external to the education institution and the experiences can be real or simulated. The term work-integrated learning seems to emphasise the location and context of the student experience.
- Terms such as “clinical placement”, “clinical experience”, and “clinical education” are used in chiropractic, optometry, orthotics and prosthetics, osteopathy, paramedicine, physiotherapy and medical radiation practice. The use of “clinical” as a descriptor of WIL appears to be aligned with the nature of the work the student is engaging in and not a descriptor of the workplace context. Similar to the use of the term WIL, there is an emphasis on clinical placements (or similar) providing opportunities to integrate theory into practice in a professional environment.
- Terms such as “placement”, “professional placement”, “practicum”, “practice placement” are used in dietetics, exercise physiology, osteopathy, paramedicine, and occupational therapy. Exercise physiology considers practicum as experience in a real-world context at a placement site. Both exercise physiology and osteopathy state that placement provides a context for the application of theoretical knowledge in practice. Osteopathy specifically excludes simulation but is inclusive of a range of external health and care environments.
- “Field education” is the preferred term in rehabilitation counselling and social work and “fieldwork” is mentioned in occupational therapy. There is no consistent definition of the term, although rehabilitation counselling described field education as experiences in industry-based settings that allow for supervised activities to be undertaken.
- Practice education is the term used by speech pathology, and occupational therapy. In speech pathology, practice education includes simulated learning, university managed clinics and external workplaces, suggesting the focus is on its educational purpose rather than the location.
3.3. Expected Outcomes/Requirements
3.4. Supervisor and Supervision Requirements
3.5. Assessment Requirements
3.6. Conceptualisation of WIL in AHP Accreditation Standards
3.7. Theme 1: The Relationship of Work-Integrated Learning to the Program Curriculum
3.8. Theme 2: Work-Integrated Learning as a Learning Process
3.9. Theme 3: Learning from Diverse Work-Integrated Learning Contexts
3.10. Theme 4: Developing Competence through Work Integrated Learning
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Allied Health Profession | Accreditation Body/Accreditation Authority | Documents Consulted |
---|---|---|
Chinese Medicine * | Chinese Medicine Accreditation Committee | 1. Professional Capabilities for Chinese medicine practitioners (2019) [36] |
2. Accreditation standards: Chinese medicine (2019) [37] | ||
3. Guidelines for accreditation of education and training programs (2020) [38] | ||
Chiropractic * | Council on Chiropractic Education Australasia | 1. Accreditation Standards for Chiropractic Programs and Competency Standards for Graduating Chiropractors (2017) [39] |
2. Accreditation Guidelines for Chiropractic Education Programs (2018) [40] | ||
3. Accreditation Policies & Procedures (2015) [41] | ||
Dietetics # | Dietitians Australia | 1. Accreditation Standards for Dietetics Education Programs Version 3.0 (2022) [42] |
2. Evidence Guide for Accreditation of Dietetics Education Programs: Examples of Evidence (2022) [43] | ||
3. Accredited Practising Dietitian (APD) Policy 2016 [44] | ||
Exercise Physiology # | Exercise & Sports Science Australia | 1. Course Accreditation Guide Version 6 (2022) [45] |
2. Accredited Exercise Physiologist Professional Standards (2021) [46] | ||
3. Accredited Exercise Physiologist Professional Standards Support Guide (2020) [47] | ||
4. Practicum Standards (2022) [48] | ||
5. Course Accreditation Requirements (2021) [49] | ||
6. Course Accreditation Standards (2022) [50] | ||
Medical Radiation Practice (includes diagnostic radiographer, nuclear medicine technologist and radiation therapist) | Medical Radiation Practice Accreditation Committee | 1. Accreditation standards: Medical radiation practice (2019) [51] |
2. Professional capabilities for medical radiation practitioners (2020) [52] | ||
Occupational Therapy * | Occupational Therapy Council of Australia Ltd. | 1. Accreditation Standards for Australian Entry-Level Occupational Therapy Education programs (2018) [53] |
2. Guidelines and Evidence Guide for the accreditation of Australian entry-level occupational therapy education programs (2022) [54] | ||
3. Occupational Therapy Council Accreditation Standards. Explanatory Guide: the use of simulation in practice education/fieldwork (2020) [55] | ||
4. World Federation of Occupational Therapists Minimum Standards for the Education of Occupational Therapists (2016) [56] | ||
5. Australian occupational therapy competency standards (2018) [57] | ||
Optometry * | Optometry Council of Australia and New Zealand | 1. Accreditation standards and Evidence Guide for Entry-Level Optometry Programs (2023) [58] |
2. Entry-level Competency Standards for Optometry (2022) [59] | ||
Orthotics & Prosthetics # | Australian Orthotic Prosthetic Association | 1. Course Accreditation Standards for Orthotic/Prosthetic Tertiary Education Programs in Australia (2020) [60] |
2. Entry Level Competency Standards for Australian Orthotist/Prosthetists (2014) [61] | ||
3. Competency Standards wall chart [62] | ||
Osteopathy * | Australasian Osteopathic Accreditation Council | 1. Osteopathic Accreditation Standards (2021) [63] |
2. Osteopathic Accreditation Standards Essential Evidence (2021) [64] | ||
3. Capabilities for Osteopathic Practice (2019) [65] | ||
Paramedicine * | Paramedicine Accreditation Committee | 1. Accreditation standards: Paramedicine (2020) [66] |
2. Professional capabilities for registered paramedics (2021) [67] | ||
Physiotherapy * | Australian Physiotherapy Council | 1. Accreditation Standard for entry-level physiotherapy practitioner programs (2016) [68] |
2. Guidelines for accreditation, entry-level physiotherapy practitioner programs of study (2021) [69] | ||
3. Physiotherapy practice thresholds in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand (2015) [70] | ||
4.Australian Physiotherapy Council (2021) [71] | ||
Podiatry * | Podiatry Accreditation Committee | 1. Accreditation standards: Entry-level podiatry programs (2021) [72] |
2. Accreditation standards: Summary (2021) [73] | ||
3. Professional capabilities for podiatrists (2022) [74] | ||
Rehabilitation Counselling # | Rehabilitation Counselling Association of Australia | 1. Accreditation Manual for Rehabilitation Counselling Education Programs (not dated) [75] |
Social Work # | Australian Association of Social Workers | 1. Australian Social Work Education and Accreditation Standards v2.1 (2021) [76] |
2. ASWEAS Field Education Standards (2021) [77] | ||
Speech Pathology # | Speech Pathology Australia | 1. Guidelines for the accreditation of speech pathology degree programs, Part 1: Regulations, standards and procedures (2022) [78] |
2. Guidelines for accreditation of speech pathology degree programs, Part 2: Evidence Guide (2022) [79] | ||
3. Guidelines for the accreditation of speech pathology degree programs, Excerpt: Accreditation standards and criteria (2022) [80] |
Allied Health Profession | The Term(s) Used to Describe Work Integrated Learning | Expected Outcomes/Requirements |
---|---|---|
Chinese Medicine | Work-integrated learning | Competence |
Chiropractic | Clinical experience placements; clinical placements; clinical experiences | Competence |
Dietetics | Workplace learning/workplace learning experiences; professional placement; placement program | Competence and a minimum of 100 days |
Exercise Physiology | Practicum, student placement, placement, practicum placements | Competence and a minimum of 360 h in a variety of activities to demonstrate attainment of competency in exercise assessment and prescription and delivery. Of these hours: |
- At least 200 h across the Accredited Exercise Physiology (AEP) core areas of practice | ||
- Remaining 160 h can be in any area across the AEP scope of practice, but with no more than 100 h across the emerging or niche areas of practice | ||
Occupational Therapy | practice education; fieldwork; practice placements | Competence and 1000 h * |
Optometry | placements; clinical placements; clinical training; clinical experiences | Competence |
Orthotics & Prosthetics | clinical placement | Competence |
Osteopathy | clinical placement; professional placement; clinical experiences | Competence |
Paramedicine | clinical placements; professional practice experience; work-integrated learning | Competence |
Physiotherapy | clinical education; clinical placement; clinical training | Competence |
Podiatry | work-integrated learning | Competence |
Medical Radiation Practice | work-integrated learning; clinical placement | Competence |
Rehabilitation Counselling | field education | A minimum of 200 h field education in any year, which includes a minimum of 80 h in direct service provision and direct client contact |
Social Work | field education; field placement | Competence and: |
Minimum of 1000 h across no more than three placements with none shorter than 250 h. | ||
At least two of the placements require distinctly different experiences. | ||
At least 500 h must be undertaken in Australia. | ||
Of the 1000 h, 500 h must be in a direct practice role. | ||
Speech Pathology | Practice education; placement | Competence |
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Penman, M.; Raymond, J.; Kumar, A.; Liang, R.Y.R.; Sundar, K.; Thomas, Y. Allied Health Professions Accreditation Standards for Work Integrated Learning: A Document Analysis. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 6478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156478
Penman M, Raymond J, Kumar A, Liang RYR, Sundar K, Thomas Y. Allied Health Professions Accreditation Standards for Work Integrated Learning: A Document Analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(15):6478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156478
Chicago/Turabian StylePenman, Merrolee, Jacqueline Raymond, Annora Kumar, Renae Y. R. Liang, Karen Sundar, and Yvonne Thomas. 2023. "Allied Health Professions Accreditation Standards for Work Integrated Learning: A Document Analysis" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 15: 6478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156478
APA StylePenman, M., Raymond, J., Kumar, A., Liang, R. Y. R., Sundar, K., & Thomas, Y. (2023). Allied Health Professions Accreditation Standards for Work Integrated Learning: A Document Analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(15), 6478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156478