Professionalism as a Predictor of Fieldwork Performance in Undergraduate Occupational Therapy Students: An Exploratory Study

Ted Brown, Mong lin Yu, Alana Hewitt, Jamie Etherington

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

This study investigated the relationship between professionalism factors and undergraduate occupational therapy students’ fieldwork performance as measured by the Student Practice Education Form–Revised Edition (SPEF-R). 135 undergraduate occupational therapy students (86% 20-24 years old; 87% female) completed the Penn State College of Medicine Professionalism Questionnaire (PSCOPQ). Student fieldwork performance was measured using the Student Practice Evaluation Form–Revised Edition (SPEF-R). Multi-linear regression with bootstrapping was completed on the midway and final SPEF-R scores. Regression analysis demonstrated a range of professionalism variables to be significant predictors of fieldwork performance at the midway assessment of their fieldwork placement: Equity was a significant predictor of Self-management Skills; Enrichment and Altruism were significant predictors of Coworker Communication; and Altruism was a strong predictor of Communication Skills. No PSCOPQ variable was found to be a significant predictor of final SPEF-R performance. The findings reflect the dynamic and complex nature of professionalism in occupational therapy fieldwork settings.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)131-154
Number of pages24
JournalOccupational Therapy in Health Care
Volume34
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Apr 2020

Keywords

  • Fieldwork performance
  • occupational therapy education
  • practice education
  • professionalism

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