Madeleine Duncan
University of Cape Town
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Featured researches published by Madeleine Duncan.
Medical Teacher | 2006
Madeleine Duncan; Melanie Alperstein; Pat Mayers; Lorna Olckers; Trevor Gibbs
Undergraduate inter- and multi-professional education has traditionally aimed to develop health professionals who are able to collaborate effectively in comprehensive healthcare delivery. The respective professions learn from and about each other through comparisons of roles, responsibilities, powers, duties and perspectives in order to promote integrated service. Described here is the educational rationale of a multi-professional course with a difference; one that injects value to undergraduate health professional education through the development of critical cross-field knowledge, skills and attitudes that unite rather than differentiate professions. The aim of this course, offered at the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, is to lay an integrated, pan-professional foundation for the advancement of collective commitment to and understanding of national health and social development objectives such as primary health care, human rights and professionalism. Pan-professional refers to curriculum content that is core and of critical relevance to all participating professions. What is learned, how it is learned, how learning is facilitated and how it is applied, has been co-constructed by a multi-professional design team representing a range of health professions (audiology, medicine, occupational therapy, nursing, physiotherapy and speech therapy) and academic disciplines (anthropology, sociology, psychology, history, African studies and social development, information technology and language literacy). Education specialists facilitate the ongoing design process ensuring that the structure and content of the curriculum complies with contemporary adult learning principles and national higher education imperatives. Designing the original curriculum required the deconstruction of intra-professional and disciplinary canons of knowledge and ways of ‘doing things’ in order to identify and develop shared interpretations of critical epistemology and axiology for health professional practice in the South African context. This enabled the alignment of the learning objectives, at first year level, of all the represented professions. The educational rationale guiding the curriculum design process is discussed in Part 1 of two articles. Part 2 describes the ‘nuts and bolts’ or practicalities of the curriculum design process.
Medical Teacher | 2006
Pat Mayers; Melanie Alperstein; Madeleine Duncan; Lorna Olckers; Trevor Gibbs
Multi-professional education has traditionally aimed to develop health professionals who are able to collaborate effectively in comprehensive healthcare delivery. The respective professions learn about their differences in order to work together, rather than developing unity in their commitment to a shared vision of professionalism and service. In this, the second of two papers, the ‘nuts and bolts’ or practicalities of designing a transformed curriculum for a multi-professional course with a difference is described. Guidelines for the curriculum design process, which seeks to be innovative, grounded in theory and relevant to the learning of the students and the ultimately the health of the patients, include: valuing education; gaining buy-in; securing buy-out; defining of roles; seeking consensus; negotiating difference and expediting decisions. The phases of the design process are described, as well as the educational outcomes envisaged during the process. Reflections of the designers, in particular on what it means to be a multi-professional team, and a reconceptualization of multi-professional education are presented as challenges for educators of health professionals.
South African Medical Journal | 2012
Nadia Hartman; Harsha Kathard; Gonda Perez; Steve Reid; James Irlam; Geney Gunston; Vicki Janse van Rensburg; Vanessa Burch; Madeleine Duncan; Derek Hellenberg; Ian Van Rooyen; Mantoa Smouse; Cynthia Sikakane; Elmi Badenhorst; Busayo Ige
Undergraduate education and training in the Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Cape Town has become socially responsive. A story of transformation that is consonant with wider societal developments since the 1994 democratic elections, outlining the changes in undergraduate curricula across the faculty, is presented.
BMC Medical Education | 2007
Lorna Olckers; Trevor Gibbs; Madeleine Duncan
Education for primary care | 2006
Lorna Olckers; Trevor Gibbs; Pat Mayers; Melanie Alperstein; Madeleine Duncan
Occupational Therapy in Psychiatry and Mental Health, Fifth Edition | 2014
Madeleine Duncan; Claire Prowse
South African Journal of Occupational Therapy | 2011
Madeleine Duncan; Leslie Swartz; Harsha Kathard
South African Journal of Occupational Therapy | 2010
T. Eidelman; V. Gouws; C. Howe; T. Kulber; J. Kümm; L. Schoenfeld; Madeleine Duncan
Samj South African Medical Journal | 2012
Nadia Hartman; Harsha Kathard; Gonda Perez; Steve Reid; James Irlam; Geney Gunston; Janse van Rensburg; Burch; Madeleine Duncan; Derek Hellenberg; I van Rooyen; Mantoa Smouse; C Sikakana; Elmi Badenhorst; Busayo Ige
South African Journal of Occupational Therapy | 2018
Sharyn Ruth Sassen; Roshan Galvaan; Madeleine Duncan