{"title":"Navigating an interprofessional curriculum: the interprofessional education passport and the quest for an interprofessional identity.","authors":"Luzaan Africa, Labeeqah Jaffer, Gerard Filies, Firdouza Waggie, Lukhanyo H Nyati, Shamila Gamiet, Pholoso Nyalungu","doi":"10.1080/13561820.2025.2566106","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Interprofessional education (IPE) is recognized globally as essential for preparing healthcare students to collaborate effectively in practice. A critical but underexplored aspect of IPE is the development of an interprofessional identity. However, many curricula still prioritize competency-based outcomes, creating a gap in addressing identity formation. The University of the Western Cape employed an IPE passport to develop students' interprofessional identity. We aimed to evaluate whether the IPE passport effectively develops and assesses students' interprofessional identity. Using a document analysis design, IPE student guides, booklets, and rubrics were systematically assessed through a four-step methodology against the Interprofessional Socialisation Framework and the IPE passport's activities were assessed against Rubric Interprofessional Identity Development's criteria. Findings revealed a disconnect between competency-focused assessment and identity-focused outcomes, highlighting the need for intentional scaffolding of identity development throughout the curriculum. In response, an IPE Passport model is proposed, integrating Interprofessional Entrustable Professional Activities and combining analytic and holistic rubrics to support identity-based assessment. This approach reframes assessment as not only measuring what students can do, but also who they are becoming as collaborative practitioners. This study demonstrates how theoretically grounded tools can guide institutions in embedding interprofessional identity development into IPE curricula, particularly in resource-constrained contexts.</p>","PeriodicalId":50174,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Interprofessional Care","volume":" ","pages":"1-11"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-10-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Interprofessional Care","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/13561820.2025.2566106","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Interprofessional education (IPE) is recognized globally as essential for preparing healthcare students to collaborate effectively in practice. A critical but underexplored aspect of IPE is the development of an interprofessional identity. However, many curricula still prioritize competency-based outcomes, creating a gap in addressing identity formation. The University of the Western Cape employed an IPE passport to develop students' interprofessional identity. We aimed to evaluate whether the IPE passport effectively develops and assesses students' interprofessional identity. Using a document analysis design, IPE student guides, booklets, and rubrics were systematically assessed through a four-step methodology against the Interprofessional Socialisation Framework and the IPE passport's activities were assessed against Rubric Interprofessional Identity Development's criteria. Findings revealed a disconnect between competency-focused assessment and identity-focused outcomes, highlighting the need for intentional scaffolding of identity development throughout the curriculum. In response, an IPE Passport model is proposed, integrating Interprofessional Entrustable Professional Activities and combining analytic and holistic rubrics to support identity-based assessment. This approach reframes assessment as not only measuring what students can do, but also who they are becoming as collaborative practitioners. This study demonstrates how theoretically grounded tools can guide institutions in embedding interprofessional identity development into IPE curricula, particularly in resource-constrained contexts.
跨专业教育(IPE)被全球公认为准备医疗保健学生在实践中有效合作的必要条件。国际政治经济学的一个关键但未被充分探索的方面是跨专业身份的发展。然而,许多课程仍然优先考虑基于能力的结果,在解决身份形成方面造成了差距。西开普省大学(University of The Western Cape)采用国际政治经济学护照来培养学生的跨专业身份。我们的目的是评估IPE护照是否有效地发展和评估学生的跨专业认同。使用文件分析设计,通过针对跨专业社会化框架的四步方法系统地评估了IPE学生指南、小册子和规则,并根据Rubric跨专业身份发展标准评估了IPE护照的活动。研究结果揭示了以能力为中心的评估和以身份为中心的结果之间的脱节,强调了在整个课程中有意地建立身份发展框架的必要性。为此,本文提出了一个IPE护照模型,该模型整合了跨专业可信赖的专业活动,并将分析性和整体性的标准相结合,以支持基于身份的评估。这种方法重新定义了评估,不仅要衡量学生能做什么,还要衡量他们将成为什么样的协作实践者。本研究展示了基于理论的工具如何指导机构将跨专业身份发展纳入国际政治经济学课程,特别是在资源受限的背景下。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Interprofessional Care disseminates research and new developments in the field of interprofessional education and practice. We welcome contributions containing an explicit interprofessional focus, and involving a range of settings, professions, and fields. Areas of practice covered include primary, community and hospital care, health education and public health, and beyond health and social care into fields such as criminal justice and primary/elementary education. Papers introducing additional interprofessional views, for example, from a community development or environmental design perspective, are welcome. The Journal is disseminated internationally and encourages submissions from around the world.