Saudi Journal of Kidney Diseases and Transplantation (Jan 2011)

Faculty-led faculty development: Evaluation and reflections on a distributed educational leadership model

  • Margaret Elzubeir

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 90 – 96

Abstract

Read online

This report describes and explores the impact of a series of faculty-led faculty de-velopment programs underpinned by principles of distributed educational leadership. We aimed to prepare faculty for their roles as facilitators and assessors in a newly implemented problem-based (PBL) graduate entry medical program. We asked participants attending a series of faculty deve-lopment programs to evaluate workshops attended using an in-house designed survey. Overall descriptive statistics for all workshops and qualitative feedback for PBL workshops alone were examined. It was concluded that clinical faculty who are not specialized in medical education can offer high-quality, well-accepted training for their peers. Faculty development, underpinned by a distributed leadership approach which supports learning organization tenets, imaginative, flexible and democratic approaches to developing and nurturing expertise at all levels of the organization, is likely to lead to improvements in medical education. Despite the limitations of the survey approach to evaluation of faculty development programs, the information provided is useful both as a basis for decision making and program improvement.