Recasting assessment in continuing professional development as a person-focused activity

Jacob Pearce, Helen Toews, Walter Tavares

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In this article, we examine assessment as conceptualized and enacted in continuing professional development (CPD). Assessment is pervasive throughout the life of an individual health professional, serving many different purposes compounded by varied and unique contexts, each with their own drivers and consequences, usually casting the person as the object of assessment. Assessment is often assumed as an included part in CPD development conceptualization. Research on assessment in CPD is often focused on systems, utility, and quality instead of intentionally examining the link between assessment and the person. We present an alternative view of assessment in CPD as person-centered, practice-informed, situated and bound by capability, and enacted in social and material contexts. With this lens of assessment as an inherently personal experience, we introduce the concept of subjectification, as described by educationalist Gert Biesta. We propose that subjectification may be a fruitful way of examining assessment in a CPD context. Although the CPD community, researchers, and educators consider this further, we offer some early implications of adopting a subjectification lens on the design and enactment of assessment in CPD.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions
Volume43
Issue number4S
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • Allied health occupations education
  • Evaluation methodology
  • Medical education
  • Professional continuing education
  • Professional development
  • Student assessment
  • Subjectivity

Disciplines

  • Adult and Continuing Education
  • Medicine and Health Sciences

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