Display options
Share it on

J Interprof Care. 2014 May;28(3):194-9. doi: 10.3109/13561820.2013.874982. Epub 2014 Jan 09.

Citizen social science: a methodology to facilitate and evaluate workplace learning in continuing interprofessional education.

Journal of interprofessional care

Ann Dadich

Affiliations

  1. School of Business, University of Western Sydney , Parramatta , Australia.

PMID: 24404844 DOI: 10.3109/13561820.2013.874982

Abstract

Workplace learning in continuing interprofessional education (CIPE) can be difficult to facilitate and evaluate, which can create a number of challenges for this type of learning. This article presents an innovative method to foster and investigate workplace learning in CIPE - citizen social science. Citizen social science involves clinicians as co-researchers in the systematic examination of social phenomena. When facilitated by an open-source online social networking platform, clinicians can participate via computer, smartphone, or tablet in ways that suit their needs and preferences. Furthermore, as co-researchers they can help to reveal the dynamic interplay that facilitates workplace learning in CIPE. Although yet to be tested, citizen social science offers four potential benefits: it recognises and accommodates the complexity of workplace learning in CIPE; it has the capacity to both foster and evaluate the phenomena; it can be used in situ, capturing and having direct relevance to the complexity of the workplace; and by advancing both theoretical and methodological debates on CIPE, it may reveal opportunities to improve and sustain workplace learning. By describing an example situated in the youth health sector, this article demonstrates how these benefits might be realised.

MeSH terms

Publication Types