Introduction Health professions education faces transitions from monodisciplinary to integrated education and from soloist teachers to interdisciplinary teacher teams. Interdisciplinary teamwork has been found complex and prone to conflict. Teachers' perceptions of why some teams work and learn as a real interdisciplinary team and others do not are lacking in this setting. We studied the factors that teachers perceive as enabling and/or inhibiting interdisciplinary team learning. Methods In this exploratory, qualitative study, we conducted 17 semi-structured, vignette-guided interviews with teachers recruited from diverse disciplines in undergraduate health professions programmes at Maastricht University, the Netherlands, through maximum va...
M (Health Professions Education), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThe continuous changing...
‘Team teaching’ across disciplines at Australian universities is rare. Academics are rig...
Describes the author\u27s impression that teachers are inadequately prepared to assume leadership ro...
PurposeTo explore team learning processes among interdisciplinary teacher teams in the development o...
This research investigated how interdisciplinary teacher teams, comprising teachers from a variety o...
In this study we aimed to examine teacher learning within a context of collaboration in interdiscipl...
Phenomenon: Developing modern medical curricula requires collaboration between different scientific ...
Context many undergraduate medical education programmes offer integrated multi-disciplinary courses,...
The recommendation that future practitioners have the competency to work effectively in interdiscipl...
The purpose of this research was to determine whether tasks constructed for interdisciplinary classe...
Teacher team involvement is considered a key factor in achieving sustainable innovation in higher ed...
Despite the growing literature on interdisciplinary teaching experiences in higher education, settin...
Residents learn by working in a multidisciplinary context, in different locations, with many clinica...
University teacher teams can work toward educational change through the process of team learning beh...
In order to cope with the challenges and demands of today's educational landscape, teachers will (in...
M (Health Professions Education), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThe continuous changing...
‘Team teaching’ across disciplines at Australian universities is rare. Academics are rig...
Describes the author\u27s impression that teachers are inadequately prepared to assume leadership ro...
PurposeTo explore team learning processes among interdisciplinary teacher teams in the development o...
This research investigated how interdisciplinary teacher teams, comprising teachers from a variety o...
In this study we aimed to examine teacher learning within a context of collaboration in interdiscipl...
Phenomenon: Developing modern medical curricula requires collaboration between different scientific ...
Context many undergraduate medical education programmes offer integrated multi-disciplinary courses,...
The recommendation that future practitioners have the competency to work effectively in interdiscipl...
The purpose of this research was to determine whether tasks constructed for interdisciplinary classe...
Teacher team involvement is considered a key factor in achieving sustainable innovation in higher ed...
Despite the growing literature on interdisciplinary teaching experiences in higher education, settin...
Residents learn by working in a multidisciplinary context, in different locations, with many clinica...
University teacher teams can work toward educational change through the process of team learning beh...
In order to cope with the challenges and demands of today's educational landscape, teachers will (in...
M (Health Professions Education), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThe continuous changing...
‘Team teaching’ across disciplines at Australian universities is rare. Academics are rig...
Describes the author\u27s impression that teachers are inadequately prepared to assume leadership ro...