TY - JOUR
T1 - Defining core conceptual knowledge
T2 - Why pharmacy education needs a new, evidence-based approach
AU - Angelo, Thomas A.
AU - McLaughlin, Jacqueline E.
AU - Munday, Michael R.
AU - White, Paul J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Once core concepts have been identified and defined, concept inventories – research-based, purpose-built, psychometrically validated multiple-choice tests – can provide valid and reliable data to uncover learners' misconceptions, target formative feedback, assess learning gains, and evaluate alternate teaching approaches. Since 1992, for example, undergraduate physics education research and teaching internationally has been transformed by the development of evidence-based concept inventories. These physics concept inventories, beginning with the Force Concept Inventory (FCI), have been administered at hundreds of universities worldwide, with two ground-breaking FCI publications cited more than 12,000 times. 1 , 2 Similar concept inventories have been developed, often with funding from the United States (US) National Science Foundation, and employed in many other undergraduate STEM disciplines.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2022/8
Y1 - 2022/8
N2 - Introduction: No pharmacy program, however well-resourced, has sufficient time or resources to teach students all current, practice-relevant knowledge. And while the volume of potential pharmacy education curriculum content increases exponentially each year, available time for direct instruction continues to decline. Given these constraints, pharmacy curricula must focus on promoting deep learning of the most critical, fundamental, broadly applicable, and lasting knowledge. Yet, in terms of didactic knowledge, pharmacy education currently has no agreed upon, evidence-based criteria for determining which foundational concepts are most important to teach nor any research-based assessment tools to demonstrate how well students have learned those core concepts. Perspective: This lack of consensus regarding core conceptual knowledge makes disparities in learning outcomes both more likely to occur and less likely to be detected or addressed. Over the past 30 years, several scientific disciplines undergirding pharmacy have developed research-based lists of core concepts and related concept inventories, demonstrating their transformative educational potential. Core concepts are big, fundamental ideas that experts agree are critical for all students in their discipline to learn, remember, understand, and apply. Concept inventories are research-based, psychometrically validated, multiple-choice tests designed to uncover learners' prior knowledge and potential misconceptions and determine their depth of understanding of disciplinary core concepts. Implications: This commentary proposes adapting and applying this evidence-based core concepts approach to enhance pharmacy education's overall effectiveness and efficiency and outlines an ongoing, multinational research initiative to identify and define essential pharmacy concepts to be taught, learned, and assessed.
AB - Introduction: No pharmacy program, however well-resourced, has sufficient time or resources to teach students all current, practice-relevant knowledge. And while the volume of potential pharmacy education curriculum content increases exponentially each year, available time for direct instruction continues to decline. Given these constraints, pharmacy curricula must focus on promoting deep learning of the most critical, fundamental, broadly applicable, and lasting knowledge. Yet, in terms of didactic knowledge, pharmacy education currently has no agreed upon, evidence-based criteria for determining which foundational concepts are most important to teach nor any research-based assessment tools to demonstrate how well students have learned those core concepts. Perspective: This lack of consensus regarding core conceptual knowledge makes disparities in learning outcomes both more likely to occur and less likely to be detected or addressed. Over the past 30 years, several scientific disciplines undergirding pharmacy have developed research-based lists of core concepts and related concept inventories, demonstrating their transformative educational potential. Core concepts are big, fundamental ideas that experts agree are critical for all students in their discipline to learn, remember, understand, and apply. Concept inventories are research-based, psychometrically validated, multiple-choice tests designed to uncover learners' prior knowledge and potential misconceptions and determine their depth of understanding of disciplinary core concepts. Implications: This commentary proposes adapting and applying this evidence-based core concepts approach to enhance pharmacy education's overall effectiveness and efficiency and outlines an ongoing, multinational research initiative to identify and define essential pharmacy concepts to be taught, learned, and assessed.
KW - Concept inventories
KW - Concepts
KW - Conceptual change
KW - Core concepts
KW - Pharmacy education
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134821395&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.cptl.2022.07.014
DO - 10.1016/j.cptl.2022.07.014
M3 - Comment / Debate
C2 - 36055700
AN - SCOPUS:85134821395
SN - 1877-1297
VL - 14
SP - 929
EP - 932
JO - Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning
JF - Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning
IS - 8
ER -