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Veterinary Curriculum Leaders: Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes

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Veterinary Curriculum Leaders: Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes. / Warman, Sheena M.; Cobb, Kate A.; Janicke, Heidi J. et al.
In: Journal of Veterinary Medical Education, 14.03.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Warman, SM, Cobb, KA, Janicke, HJ, Cake, M, Bell, M, Kelly, S, Read, E & Armitage-Chan, E 2023, 'Veterinary Curriculum Leaders: Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes', Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme-2022-0098

APA

Warman, S. M., Cobb, K. A., Janicke, H. J., Cake, M., Bell, M., Kelly, S., Read, E., & Armitage-Chan, E. (2023). Veterinary Curriculum Leaders: Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes. Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme-2022-0098

Vancouver

Warman SM, Cobb KA, Janicke HJ, Cake M, Bell M, Kelly S et al. Veterinary Curriculum Leaders: Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes. Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. 2023 Mar 14. Epub 2023 Mar 14. doi: 10.3138/jvme-2022-0098

Author

Warman, Sheena M. ; Cobb, Kate A. ; Janicke, Heidi J. et al. / Veterinary Curriculum Leaders : Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes. In: Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. 2023.

Bibtex

@article{18257c1bfa2d4678b0d7c9b179700526,
title = "Veterinary Curriculum Leaders: Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes",
abstract = "Curriculum leaders (individuals with responsibility for an institution{\textquoteright}s veterinary curriculum) play a vital role in driving local curriculum priorities, development, and accreditation. This study aimed to describe the career paths of curriculum leaders, and identify what motivates them, the barriers they face, and the knowledge, skills, and attributes they perceive as essential for the role. Self-determination theory was used to identify tensions experienced within the role. An international online survey targeted at those identifying as curriculum leaders was completed by 45 participants. 91% of participants held a doctoral level qualification and/or clinical Boards; 82% had additional training in leadership; 38% had additional formal training in education. Motivators included a desire to make a difference, personal satisfaction with teaching and working with students, and social influences. Participants experienced barriers relating to self-development and achievement of their curriculum goals; participants described essential knowledge (of the profession, educational theory, and wider higher education context) and skills (leading teams, change management, and communication). Attributes considered important related both to self (open-minded, patient, resilient, able to see the big picture as well as detail) and relationships with others (approachable, listener, respectful and respected, supportive, credible). Tensions arose in participants{\textquoteright} need for autonomy (experiencing barriers to achieving their goals), in their social relatedness (achieving curriculum goals while working with colleagues with conflicting priorities), and in perceptions of necessary competence (a need, but lack of opportunity, for advanced training in educational theory). The findings may help institutions more effectively support and train current and future curriculum leaders.",
keywords = "academic leadership, curriculum leadership, faculty development, self-determination theory, veterinary curricula",
author = "Warman, {Sheena M.} and Cobb, {Kate A.} and Janicke, {Heidi J.} and Martin Cake and Melinda Bell and Sarah Kelly and Emma Read and Elizabeth Armitage-Chan",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
day = "14",
doi = "10.3138/jvme-2022-0098",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Veterinary Medical Education",
issn = "0748-321X",
publisher = "University of Toronto Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Veterinary Curriculum Leaders

T2 - Motivators, Barriers, and Attributes

AU - Warman, Sheena M.

AU - Cobb, Kate A.

AU - Janicke, Heidi J.

AU - Cake, Martin

AU - Bell, Melinda

AU - Kelly, Sarah

AU - Read, Emma

AU - Armitage-Chan, Elizabeth

PY - 2023/3/14

Y1 - 2023/3/14

N2 - Curriculum leaders (individuals with responsibility for an institution’s veterinary curriculum) play a vital role in driving local curriculum priorities, development, and accreditation. This study aimed to describe the career paths of curriculum leaders, and identify what motivates them, the barriers they face, and the knowledge, skills, and attributes they perceive as essential for the role. Self-determination theory was used to identify tensions experienced within the role. An international online survey targeted at those identifying as curriculum leaders was completed by 45 participants. 91% of participants held a doctoral level qualification and/or clinical Boards; 82% had additional training in leadership; 38% had additional formal training in education. Motivators included a desire to make a difference, personal satisfaction with teaching and working with students, and social influences. Participants experienced barriers relating to self-development and achievement of their curriculum goals; participants described essential knowledge (of the profession, educational theory, and wider higher education context) and skills (leading teams, change management, and communication). Attributes considered important related both to self (open-minded, patient, resilient, able to see the big picture as well as detail) and relationships with others (approachable, listener, respectful and respected, supportive, credible). Tensions arose in participants’ need for autonomy (experiencing barriers to achieving their goals), in their social relatedness (achieving curriculum goals while working with colleagues with conflicting priorities), and in perceptions of necessary competence (a need, but lack of opportunity, for advanced training in educational theory). The findings may help institutions more effectively support and train current and future curriculum leaders.

AB - Curriculum leaders (individuals with responsibility for an institution’s veterinary curriculum) play a vital role in driving local curriculum priorities, development, and accreditation. This study aimed to describe the career paths of curriculum leaders, and identify what motivates them, the barriers they face, and the knowledge, skills, and attributes they perceive as essential for the role. Self-determination theory was used to identify tensions experienced within the role. An international online survey targeted at those identifying as curriculum leaders was completed by 45 participants. 91% of participants held a doctoral level qualification and/or clinical Boards; 82% had additional training in leadership; 38% had additional formal training in education. Motivators included a desire to make a difference, personal satisfaction with teaching and working with students, and social influences. Participants experienced barriers relating to self-development and achievement of their curriculum goals; participants described essential knowledge (of the profession, educational theory, and wider higher education context) and skills (leading teams, change management, and communication). Attributes considered important related both to self (open-minded, patient, resilient, able to see the big picture as well as detail) and relationships with others (approachable, listener, respectful and respected, supportive, credible). Tensions arose in participants’ need for autonomy (experiencing barriers to achieving their goals), in their social relatedness (achieving curriculum goals while working with colleagues with conflicting priorities), and in perceptions of necessary competence (a need, but lack of opportunity, for advanced training in educational theory). The findings may help institutions more effectively support and train current and future curriculum leaders.

KW - academic leadership

KW - curriculum leadership

KW - faculty development

KW - self-determination theory

KW - veterinary curricula

U2 - 10.3138/jvme-2022-0098

DO - 10.3138/jvme-2022-0098

M3 - Journal article

JO - Journal of Veterinary Medical Education

JF - Journal of Veterinary Medical Education

SN - 0748-321X

ER -