INTRAMURAL ROTATIONS - 2019/0
Module code: VMS5001
Module Overview
This module consists of 8 x 4 week rotations and a Transition into the Profession unit of attendance, which is delivered during the introduction and return weeks. The module rotations provide students with opportunities to further develop student day one knowledge, competences, attributes and skills through their integration and application in a workplace-based placement providing an authentic, safe and supervised learning environment, facilitating the transition from student to confident, competent and compassionate veterinarians.
Opportunities are provided in a network of clinical practices or facilities which include:
- Small animal practice
- Equine practice
- Production animal practice
- Referral practice
- Veterinary public health and veterinary pathology
- A special interest elective
Within these practice settings students will be given opportunities to develop and demonstrate the knowledge, professional skills and attributes, practical skills and clinical competences expected of newly-qualified veterinary surgeons. This will be achieved by facilitation of targeted experiences and engagements during the placements, aligned to the following six domains of clinical practice;
- Veterinary knowledge
- Technical skills
- Clinical Reasoning
- Communication skills
- Patient Care
- Professionalism and professional skills
Module provider
School of Veterinary Medicine
Module Leader
CATHCART Michael (Vet Med)
Number of Credits: 120
ECTS Credits: 60
Framework: FHEQ Level 7
Module cap (Maximum number of students): N/A
Overall student workload
Workshop Hours: 50
Clinical Placement Hours: 900
Independent Learning Hours: 300
Practical/Performance Hours: 6
Module Availability
Year long
Prerequisites / Co-requisites
Successful completion of all of the units of study in years one to four of the BVMSci programme following the late summer examinations.
Module content
Indicative content includes:
- Regular attendance at the partner practices under the supervision of the practice partner and the veterinary clinical teaching fellow
- Active participation in all aspects of the practice including out of hours and management of emergency cases
- Regular attendance and active participation throughout the VPPH rotation at the University and for off-site visits
- Regular attendance at transition to profession workshops
Assessment pattern
Assessment type | Unit of assessment | Weighting |
---|---|---|
Coursework | ePortfolio | Pass/Fail |
Practical based assessment | Rotation associated Clinical, Oral & Practical Assessment - Small Animal GP 1 | 12 |
Practical based assessment | Rotation associated Clinical, Oral & Practical Assessment - Small Animal GP 2 | 12 |
Practical based assessment | Rotation associated Clinical, Oral & Practical Assessment - Production Animal | 12 |
Practical based assessment | Rotation associated Clinical, Oral & Practical Assessment - Equine | 12 |
Practical based assessment | Rotation associated Clinical, Oral & Practical Assessment - Veterinary Pathology and Public Health | 12 |
Examination | End of year final theory exam - Written | 40 |
Alternative Assessment
Where a student has failed the e-portolio, relevant individual assets will be reassessed using virtual or simulated case material.
Assessment Strategy
Formative assessment and feedback
The nature of the 120 credit module allows for a continuum of extensive formative feedback and evaluation as students build their skills and competences across the various placements. The student will receive weekly global assessment feedback across the six competency domains listed above, which will feed forward in to the next placement, and contribute to their portfolio.
Veterinary Clinical Teaching fellows will have regular meeting with students to monitor this feedback and formatively assess their portfolio assets, which includes case-reflections, case reports, audits, objective and competency reflections, and various completion tasks (case logs and skills logs). A marking rubric will be used for each asset of the portfolio.
Summative Assessment
The strategy is designed to use a variety of modalities to assess the full range of knowledge, skills and attributes required for day one competency and demonstrate achievement of programme outcomes.
The elements used include a knowledge-based single-best answer exam at the end of the module; rotation-specific clinical, oral and practical examinations (except the special interest elective), which occur in the return weeks after every two rotations; and an e-Portfolio, as outlined above, which will be summatively assessed upon completion of the module, based on achieving minimum requirements within each asset. The Clinical/Oral/Practical (COP) summative assessments will be examined by both University academics and trained Clinical Instruction Mentors.
The summative assessment for this module is summarised below
Rotation
e-Portfolio (Pass/Fail)
Clinical/Oral/Practical (COP) exams
12% x 5 = 60%
Written –- 40%
SA GP I
Several elements arising from each rotation. Ongoing formative feedback and a final summative assessment at end of year.
12%
The questions will be based upon learning outcomes across all the Surrey BVMSci modules mapped to the RCVS Day One competencies.
SA GP II
12%
PA
12%
Equine
12%
VPPH
12%
Special Interest Elective
Qualifying Conditions
This entire module is core whereby every unit of assessment is a barrier assessment.
- Students must attain a pass grade in the ePortfolio and the special interest elective.
- The pass mark for the rotation specific COP examinations is 50%.
- The pass mark for the end-of-year written assessment is set via prospective standard setting.
A rotation specific COP examination failed in Semester 1 will be retaken in the Semester 2 examination period. A rotation specific COP examination failed in Semester 2 will be retaken in the late summer examination period.
Module aims
- This module aims to further develop student day one competences, attributes and skills through their integration and application in a workplace-based placement providing an authentic, safe and supervised learning environment, facilitating the transition from student to confident, competent and compassionate veterinarians
Learning outcomes
Attributes Developed | Ref | ||
---|---|---|---|
001 | On successful completion of this module students should, in accordance with the RCVS Day One Competences, be able to demonstrate the knowledge, professional skills and attributes, practical skills and clinical competences expected of newly-qualified veterinary surgeons | KCPT | LO 5.1.1 |
Attributes Developed
C - Cognitive/analytical
K - Subject knowledge
T - Transferable skills
P - Professional/Practical skills
Methods of Teaching / Learning
The learning and teaching strategy is designed to:
- Allow active participation in all aspects of veterinary practice within a relevant context to achieve the RCVS Day One competencies.
- Promote demonstration of the following six domains of competence;
- Veterinary knowledge
- Technical skills
- Clinical Reasoning
- Communication skills
- Patient Care
- Professionalism
- Embody a student-centred developmental approach to clinical education
- Provide supervision and mentorship in each placement via clinical instruction mentors and veterinary clinical teaching fellows
- The learning and teaching methods include:
- Supervision of case management and clinical interactions within practice
- Observation and formative evaluation of technical skills performance
- Formal and informal case discussions with the clinicians, nurses and support staff
- Engaging and interacting with all members of the veterinary team
- Portfolio writing with continual review and feedback from Veterinary Clinical Teaching Fellows
- Students will be able to track their clinical experience through use of a structured case log and clinical skills log
- For the pathology and public health rotation:
- In-house case discussions with the pathologists and technical staff
- Abattoir and processing plant site visits and data collection, management
- Portfolio writing based on cases and reflections about the experiences
- Mid placement review and feedback of the portfolio by the VPPH tutors
Indicated Lecture Hours (which may also include seminars, tutorials, workshops and other contact time) are approximate and may include in-class tests where one or more of these are an assessment on the module. In-class tests are scheduled/organised separately to taught content and will be published on to student personal timetables, where they apply to taken modules, as soon as they are finalised by central administration. This will usually be after the initial publication of the teaching timetable for the relevant semester.
Reading list
https://readinglists.surrey.ac.uk
Upon accessing the reading list, please search for the module using the module code: VMS5001
Programmes this module appears in
Programme | Semester | Classification | Qualifying conditions |
---|---|---|---|
Veterinary Medicine and Science BVMSci (Hons)(CORE) | Year-long | Core | Each unit of assessment must be passed at 50% to pass the module |
Please note that the information detailed within this record is accurate at the time of publishing and may be subject to change. This record contains information for the most up to date version of the programme / module for the 2019/0 academic year.