Teaching Strategies for Interdisciplinary Collaboration within Gerontology Education
Elaine Jurkowski

TL;DR
This paper presents teaching strategies to train students in interdisciplinary collaboration for gerontology, using real-world patient cases and team-based learning.
Contribution
The study introduces three novel strategies—Student Hotspotting, Interdisciplinary Day (IPE), and a collaborative teaching clinic—to enhance gerontological education through interprofessional teamwork.
Findings
Student Hotspotting provided a year-long interdisciplinary experience with older patients.
The IPE day used case studies and guest presenters to develop collaborative care plans.
The teaching clinic combined multiple health disciplines to address complex aging-related health conditions.
Abstract
A critical area within gerontological education and medical/health/behavioral professions is to educate and train students for competence within interprofessional collaboration. Based on the experiential learning theory (Kolb & Kolb, 2017) and drawing from the IPCE model (Interprofessional Education Collaborative, 2023), this study has creatively designed a training /education model for students within gerontological fields of practice to enhance their ability to understand the concept of working collaboratively across disciplines. Students were placed in teams utilizing one of at least three models of experiential education and worked across teams with real patient/consumer consultations/case management strategies. The goal was to achieve both patient/consumer outcomes and learn about professional practice with people growing older using an interdisciplinary collaborative approach.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInterprofessional Education and Collaboration · Interdisciplinary Research and Collaboration · Aging and Gerontology Research
