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Experiences with an English taught semester in Medicine at the University of Oslo. Mr. Sverre Bjerkeset, Administrative International Coordinator Professor Babill Stray-Pedersen MD, PhD former Head of the 9th Semester Committee Professor Borghild Roald MD, PhD former Educational Dean.
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Experiences with an English taught semester in Medicine at the University of Oslo Mr. Sverre Bjerkeset, Administrative International Coordinator Professor Babill Stray-Pedersen MD, PhD former Head of the 9th Semester Committee Professor Borghild Roald MD, PhD former Educational Dean
Background • Teaching exclusively in Norwegian seriously limited student exchange • Increased internationalization - a University and Faculty strategy • Structural factors: The Norwegian “Quality Reform”
Aim of project • Make the Faculty more attractive for students and teachers from outside the Nordic countries • Increase the number of exchange agreements with quality universities, especially in English speaking countries • Increase students’ and teachers’ competence in English • Internationalization at home
Why the 9th (of 12) semester? • Students in their 5th year of study are relatively confident in their professional development • Students then have a growing knowledge of the health care system in their own country • The theme of the semester (Reproduction. Mother and Child) has important global features • Logistical reasons: Curriculum compatibility with partner universities
Challenges in the preparatory phase • Funding • Faculty Board decision • Preparing the teaching • Specially organized, intensive English courses for teachers • Translation of teaching material • Acquisition of updated teaching/material in English • Study tours for teachers to English speaking universities and hospitals • Visits of academic staff from partner universities • Obtaining exchange agreements with universities in English speaking countries
Challenges in running the semester • Teaching in English is more demanding for the teachers • Communication with patients may be difficult • A certain number of exchange students is required to make the semester work naturally, ideally 20-30% of the class
Organization of the semester • Compulsary for all Norwegian students and teachers • All plenary teaching is conducted in English • All learning material is in English • Small group teaching (PBL and clinical small group teaching) is carried out in either Norwegian or English
Organization of the semester - continued • Exchange students are preferably accompanied by Norwegian students in the clinical duty • Norwegian students are responsible for translating or summarizing if it is not possible or appropriate to speak in English • Students can choose the language of the exams (Norwegian or English)
Student evaluation • Undertaken at the end of each semester • The main tendency is positive • Overall satisfaction: Norwegian students: 64-85% Exchange students: 77-100% • Exchange students are generally more positive than Norwegian students • Except language related issues, complaints from Norwegian students are the same as in other semesters
External evaluation by the Faculty of Education, UiO in 2004 • Norwegian students: teachers’ ability to convey knowledge and the pedagogical planning suffer • Other factors than the quality of teaching determine the exchange students’ overall opinion • 50% of teachers and 66% of Norwegian students report that they have improved their English language skills
External evaluation by the Faculty of Education, UiO in 2004 - continued • Little coherence between students’ evaluation of the arrangement and their English competence • Strong coherence between teachers’ self evaluation of language skills and how well they think the teaching works and their comfort with this teaching • Criticism from teachers towards the handling of certain organizational and practical matters in the initial phase • Teachers reports that the teaching is less nuanced, detailed. Teaching context feels more constrained
A few facts • Increase in number of exchange agreements • Substantial increase in number of exchange students (to and from partner universities for minimum 3 months): Incoming: 99/00: 10 04/05: 67 Outgoing: 99/00: 6 04/05: 50
Concluding remarks • Norwegian is the main teaching language in the Oslo medical curriculum • No indicatons that the quality loss in the 9th semester is such that teaching in English can not be justified • Teaching in English is a challenge, but the practical obstacles are largely overcome and the semester now runs quite smoothly • The Faculty Board has recently decided that the 9th semester shall be taught in English on a permanent basis