Development of an OIE Harmonized Day 1 Competency-Based Veterinary School Curriculum in Ethiopia: A Partnership Model for Curriculum Evaluation and Implementation.

Armando E Hoet, Emily E Feyes, Tsegaw Fentie, Achenef Melaku, Seleshe Nigatu, Suzanne Tomasi, Ross Coniglio, Jeanette O'Quin, Jason W Stull, Wondwossen Gebreyes, Amanda M Berrian
Author Information
  1. Armando E Hoet: Veterinary Public Health Program.
  2. Emily E Feyes: College of Veterinary Medicine.
  3. Tsegaw Fentie: College of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences.
  4. Achenef Melaku: College of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences.
  5. Seleshe Nigatu: College of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences.
  6. Suzanne Tomasi: College of Veterinary Medicine.
  7. Ross Coniglio: College of Veterinary Medicine.
  8. Jeanette O'Quin: College of Veterinary Medicine.
  9. Jason W Stull: College of Veterinary Medicine.
  10. Wondwossen Gebreyes: College of Veterinary Medicine.
  11. Amanda M Berrian: Veterinary Public Health Program, Department of Veterinary Preventive Medicine.

Abstract

The University of Gondar College of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences (UoG-CVMASc) and the Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine (OSU-CVM) developed an objective methodology to assess the curriculum of veterinary institutions and implement changes to create a curriculum that is harmonized with OIE standards while also covering the needs and realities of Gondar and Ethiopia. The process, developed under the sponsorship of the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) Veterinary Education Twinning Programme, is outlined in this article with the hope that it can be applied by other countries wishing to improve national veterinary services (VS) through the improvement of their academic programs. The plan created by the UoG-OSU Twinning team consisted of an in-depth curriculum assessment and development process, which entailed three consecutive stages. Stage 1 (Curriculum Assessment) included the design and development of an in recent graduates, and the mapping and evaluation of the current UoG-CVMASc curriculum based on the OIE Veterinary Education Core Curriculum. Stage 2 (Curriculum Development) consisted of the identification and prioritization of possible solutions to address identified curriculum gaps as well as the development of an action plan to revise and update the curriculum. Finally, Stage 3 (Curriculum Implementation) focused on the process to launch the new curriculum. In September 2017, 53 first-year students started the professional program at the UoG-CVMASc as the first cohort to be accepted into the newly developed OIE Harmonized Curriculum, the first of its kind in Africa.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Animals
Curriculum
Education, Veterinary
Ethiopia
Humans
Schools, Veterinary
Veterinarians
Veterinary Medicine

Word Cloud

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