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Preparing for the workplace: fostering generic attributes in allied health education programs.
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1999
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Program ImplementationAllied Health ProfessionsEducationHealth Care ManagementWorkforce EducationGeneric SkillsOccupational Health ServicePublic HealthCurriculum StrategyHealth Services ResearchHealth EducationHealth SciencesFostering Generic AttributesHealth PolicyHealth WorkforceLearning SciencesWorkplace LearningAllied Health CurriculaHealth PromotionCurriculum DevelopmentCurriculumHealth SystemsCurriculum & InstructionContinuing Medical EducationHealth Profession TrainingEducational Program Development
Allied health curricula need to extend beyond the learning of discipline-specific skills to encompass broader learning goals. In particular, the acquisition of generic skills is necessary to enable graduates to function more competently and confidently within their rapidly changing work, professional, and societal environments. In health sciences education particularly, the rate of change in practice and education is rapid and unprecedented. If educators focus on components of the curriculum rather than the entire learning experience, they are likely to significantly limit the students' acquisition of such generic skills. To achieve the desired generic skills outcomes, an overarching, integrated, and consistently applied curriculum strategy is advocated. This article considers a number of such strategies relevant to allied health education.