Final-Year Veterinary Students’ Perspectives on Professionalism Education at Select Veterinary Schools in Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom

GORDON, Stuart John Galt, MUÑIZ, Cristina de Corral, MEEHAN, Michael, COBB, Kate, MOSSOP, Liz, BELL, Melinda and CAKE, Martin (2026). Final-Year Veterinary Students’ Perspectives on Professionalism Education at Select Veterinary Schools in Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. Education Sciences, 16 (5): 791. [Article]

Documents
37553:1299545
[thumbnail of Mossop-FinalYearVeterinaryStudents(VoR).pdf]
Preview
PDF
Mossop-FinalYearVeterinaryStudents(VoR).pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (263kB) | Preview
Abstract
The teaching and assessment of veterinary professionalism are essential components of veterinary degree curricula. The content of veterinary professionalism education programs has been informed by multiple stakeholders including educators, practitioners, and regulatory bodies. Since student perceptions also represent a powerful force in shaping the curriculum, the aim of this study was to explore the perspectives of final-year veterinary students on professionalism teaching and learning within their veterinary program. A mixed-methods study was conducted across three veterinary schools (Massey University–New Zealand; Murdoch University–Australia; University of Nottingham–United Kingdom). An online survey captured final-year veterinary students’ opinions on professionalism teaching and the suitability of their current professionalism curricula. Subsequent focus groups explored perceptions in greater depth. Of 81 survey respondents, 66% perceived professionalism instruction to be essential, 79% agreed that their current professionalism instruction included appropriate content, and 58% perceived the instruction to represent adequate preparation for interaction with clients and professional colleagues. Only 39% of respondents, however, agreed that professionalism teaching was well integrated into the rest of the program. Three themes were identified following thematic analysis of the transcripts from the 11 focus groups conducted: ‘the challenges associated with teaching and assessing professionalism’, ‘the influence of clinical teaching faculty on student professionalism development’, and ‘the importance of adopting effective teaching methods to teach professionalism’. Findings from both studies showed that students placed the greatest value on learning and assessing professionalism within an authentic clinical context, while also appreciating interactive teaching formats and group work. Educators should, therefore, consider integration, authenticity, and interactive delivery as they continue to develop their veterinary professionalism curricula.
More Information
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics

Metrics

Altmetric Badge

Dimensions Badge

Share
Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item