TY - JOUR
T1 - Stakeholder perspectives following implementation of Vietnam’s first speech-language pathology degrees
T2 - recommendations for future curriculum development
AU - McAllister, Lindy
AU - Hewat, Sally
AU - Penman, Adriana
AU - Atherton, Marie
AU - Tran, Van
AU - Verdon, Sarah
AU - Nguyen, Thuy Thi Thanh
AU - Pham, Dung
AU - Webb, Gwendalyn
AU - Walters, Joanne
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024/4
Y1 - 2024/4
N2 - Purpose: To investigate perspectives of multiple stakeholders involved in development and delivery of Vietnam’s first speech-language pathology degrees and derive recommendations for future degrees in Vietnam and other Majority World countries. Methods: An exploratory-descriptive qualitative research design using focus groups and individual semi-structured interviews in the preferred language (English or Vietnamese) was used, with 70 participants from five stakeholder groups: project managers, students, academic educators, placement supervisors and interpreters. Transcriptions were analysed using thematic network analysis. Results: Analysis identified five organising themes: (1) People enjoyed working with/learning from others; (2) Benefits from/to stakeholders; (3) The pandemic impacted program delivery and learning; (4) Practical challenges; (5) Preparation with flexibility required for success and sustainability. From the five organising themes, one synthesising global theme was developed, conveying that satisfying international collaborations require preparation, support, high quality interpreting, and management of challenges. Conclusions: Recommendations highlight the need for preparation, collaboration, support to manage challenges, flexibility, recognition for placement supervisors and high-quality interpreting. The recommendations are of relevance to other organisations engaged in development of professional degrees in Majority World countries. Future research would benefit from a critical investigation of the diverse perspectives of stakeholders involved in the development and implementation of international curricula.
AB - Purpose: To investigate perspectives of multiple stakeholders involved in development and delivery of Vietnam’s first speech-language pathology degrees and derive recommendations for future degrees in Vietnam and other Majority World countries. Methods: An exploratory-descriptive qualitative research design using focus groups and individual semi-structured interviews in the preferred language (English or Vietnamese) was used, with 70 participants from five stakeholder groups: project managers, students, academic educators, placement supervisors and interpreters. Transcriptions were analysed using thematic network analysis. Results: Analysis identified five organising themes: (1) People enjoyed working with/learning from others; (2) Benefits from/to stakeholders; (3) The pandemic impacted program delivery and learning; (4) Practical challenges; (5) Preparation with flexibility required for success and sustainability. From the five organising themes, one synthesising global theme was developed, conveying that satisfying international collaborations require preparation, support, high quality interpreting, and management of challenges. Conclusions: Recommendations highlight the need for preparation, collaboration, support to manage challenges, flexibility, recognition for placement supervisors and high-quality interpreting. The recommendations are of relevance to other organisations engaged in development of professional degrees in Majority World countries. Future research would benefit from a critical investigation of the diverse perspectives of stakeholders involved in the development and implementation of international curricula.
KW - collaborative international partnerships
KW - communication and swallowing rehabilitation
KW - development
KW - education
KW - majority world
KW - speech and language therapy
KW - Speech-language pathology
KW - Vietnam
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U2 - 10.1080/09638288.2024.2346237
DO - 10.1080/09638288.2024.2346237
M3 - Article
C2 - 38682811
AN - SCOPUS:85192177262
SN - 0963-8288
JO - Disability and Rehabilitation
JF - Disability and Rehabilitation
ER -