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Institute
- Fakultät WiSo (174) (remove)
Der vorliegende Beitrag hat zum Ziel, zunächst die Bedingungen herauszuarbeiten, die zum Gelingen der Anrechnung im Kontext der wissenschaftlichen Weiterbildung erforderlich sind. Im Absprung hiervon soll herausgestellt werden, nach welchen Kriterien eine sinnvolle Verbindung von verschiedenen wissenschaftlichen Weiterbildungsangeboten untereinander bzw. mit Studiengängen geschehen sollte. Zur Untersuchung steht, unter welchen Bedingungen die Vergleichbarkeit von Zertifikaten der wissenschaftlichen Weiterbildung gewährleistet und eine einheitliche, transparente sowie weitestgehend verbindliche Zertifikatssystematik für die Bezeichnung von Abschlüssen im Kontext der wissenschaftlichen Weiterbildung implementiert werden kann.
Angehörige der Gesundheitsberufe sehen sich vermehrt mit komplexen und neuen Aufgaben sowie einem veränderten Arbeitsumfeld konfrontiert. Gleichzeitig ist das Gesundheitswesen durch ein hohes Maß an Arbeitsteilung gekennzeichnet, die das nahtlose Zusammenwirken unterschiedlichster Gesundheitsberufe voraussetzt. Daher kommt der Entwicklung interdisziplinärer Kompetenzen eine hohe Bedeutung zu.
An der Hochschule Osnabrück werden im Rahmen des BMBF-geförderten Forschungsverbundprojekts „Kompetenzentwicklung von Gesundheitsfachpersonal im Kontext des Lebenslangen Lernens“ (KeGL) berufsbegleitende wissenschaftliche Zertifikatsangebote in den Bereichen Patientensicherheitsmanagement und Gesundheitsinformatik entwickelt und in interdisziplinär zusammengesetzten Gruppen erprobt. Im Mittelpunkt dieser Handreichung stehen die Ergebnisse und Erfahrungen aus der ersten Förderphase, in welcher neben einer Analyse von Kompetenzbedarfen, die Erarbeitung eines Lehr-Lern-Konzepts und die Erprobung zweier Pilotmodule erfolgt sind.
Talent scarcity in many parts of the world leads to the necessity to enlarge talent pools in order to provide enough future holders of key positions. Taking the scholarly discussion at the overlap of talent management and current careers literature as a starting point our qualitative empirical research provides insights in talent’s career decisions in an eastern emerging market, India, and a western developed country, Germany. 49 interviews with internationally experienced knowledge-workers were held to find out how to they come to career decisions throughout their career. Special focus was the balancing act of professional and private life sphere. An inductive-deductive approach was used to develop categories in MaxQda. Results show the impact of institutional frame, cultural context, and gender differences. Consequently, a stronger focus on talent’s different life phases with context specific deviations when configuring Talent Management in Multinational Enterprises can be advised.
In Germany, a lot of young children at risk of language difficulties still go undetected or are not assessed before preschool-age. For children where parents may suspect a disorder, this practice causes a lot of emotional distress alongside lost time for intervention. Thus, what contribution can parents and nursery staff make for the earlier detection of language difficulties? 34 children from four German kindergartens were tested with a standardized preschool screening for language problems by an SLT. Parents and nursery staff completed a questionnaire (FEE 3-4) that was designed to collect potential risk-factors and included the rating of children’s abilities across the main language domains. Outcomes from the FEE 3-4 were compared between parents and nursery staff as well as triangulated with results from the standardized screening. Agreement between parents and nursery staff re. individual children’s potential language difficulties was moderate (Kappa = 0.44, p = .050). Overall, nursery staff rated children’s language abilities more strictly and precisely than parents. Especially their rating of ‘word order’ (p = .022) and ‘verb endings’ contributed significantly to the identification of potential language difficulties similar to the standardized screening. The screening identified two children at risk without caregiver's concern, but not two others who were at risk of language disorder and for whom caregivers expressed concern. Caregiver’s awareness of early language difficulties appears to be rather intuitive. Young children at risk are most reliably detected if standardized instruments are used in combination with caregiver questionnaires. Ideally, this process includes data from parents and nursery staff to be interpreted by an experienced SLT, as the use of a standardized screening alone may lead to missed or mistaken identification where essential information about the child’s environment (e.g. risk factors) is not provided. If parents are concerned about children’s language, full assessment is clearly justified.
The increasing complexity of caseloads in SLT practice, e.g. due to higher comorbidity, lacking information or experience in the
treatment of complicated cases, calls for support from experienced as well as specialist practitioners from within the field - especially
for novice therapists. One way to tackle these challenges may be peer coaching and how it can be employed within the educational
and professional SLT setting.
Peer coaching was implemented across five semesters of a successive SLT study programme at a University of Applied Sciences in
Germany. The approach was embedded in a clinical reasoning seminar with 25 SLT students who each presented a challenging case
study from their current workload. All participants completed a short online survey to evaluate the feasibility of the team approach
within this setting as well as their personal benefit and development re. the discussed case studies.
Students felt encouraged by being able to share their experience and tackle actual challenges. They particularly valued receiving
answers from a broad range of other SLTs but also contributing to other students’ queries and providing practical solutions for
them. All participants felt that peer coaching was an appropriate approach for clinical reasoning to support their professional as well
as personal development. Other outcomes were a perceived increased ability to employ metacognitive reflection to be used with
their whole caseload but also a prospective need for further training. Some students suggested the employment of peer coaching
within their work setting.
In the educational as well as professional SLT setting, peer coaching can be successfully employed, triggering metacognitive
reflection re. practitioner’s thinking and acting, resulting in an increased awareness of needs and skills as part of the clinical
reasoning process.
Teachers in health informatics have a broad variety of international and national educational recommendations to rely on when designing programmes, curricula, courses and educational material. However, in addition they often need very specific information for their setting, blue-prints, hands-on experience and encouragement to try something new. This workshop presents three case studies from European universities who have implemented inter-professional, technology enabled health informatics courses in undergraduate, postgraduate and open university settings. These approaches will be put into the context of the TIGER recommendation framework that includes priority ratings of health informatics competencies and case studies to illustrate them. The workshop attendees will have ample opportunity to exchange ideas with the presenters and start a mutual learning process for health informatics teachers.
Background: IT is getting an increasing importance in hospitals. In this
context, major IT decisions are often made by CEOs who are not necessarily IT
experts. Objectives: Therefore, this study aimed at a) exploring different types of IT
decision makers at CEO level, b) identifying hypotheses if trust exists between these
different types of CEOs and their CIOs and c) building hypotheses on potential
consequences regarding risk taking and innovation. Methods: To this end, 14
qualitative interviews with German hospital CEOs were conducted to explore the
research questions. Results: The study revealed three major types: IT savvy CEOs,
IT enthusiastic CEOs and IT indifferent CEOs. Depending on these types, their
relationship with the CIO varied in terms of trust and common language. In case of
IT indifferent CEOs, a potential vicious circle of lack of IT knowledge, missing trust,
low willingness to take risks and low innovation power could be identified.
Conclusion: In order to break of this circle, CEOs seem to need more IT knowledge
and / or greater trust in their CIO.
The demographic shift in the age structure has the effects that many ageing employees work in organisations. Migration can slow down the ageing of population but could not stop it. More and more people with immigration background work in organisations. Therefore, the question is, whether diversity sensitive attitudes count for all diversity aspects. The central aim of the study is to deal with the problem fields of multicultural teamwork. Thereby, the focus is on the collaboration of employees with and without immigration background. The interviews with employees with and without an immigra-tion background of various company branches were conducted. The results show that employees with an immigration background have more contact and feel comfortable with persons from different cultures than employees without an immigration back-ground. The qualitative analysis indicates that there is a high need of competence devel-opment, especially intercultural and social competences in organisations. The results of the study reveal that personality traits and characteristics of employees play a role to what extent they accept diversity and are willing to work with persons from another culture. Age is not important regarding intercultural competence development.
Purpose
Attracting skilled students is an important aim of many cities in a knowledge-based society. This paper focuses on urban factors of attractiveness from a student's perspective and analyses their influence on locational choices of students. The criteria found were also used to evaluate how the City of Osnabrück, Germany, is rated in terms of these criteria and to reveal the greatest discrepancies.
Design / Methodology / Approach
The paper is based on a multi-level empirical research concept, including qualitative and quantitative approaches. A survey of 2,300 students was conducted in Osnabrück on the basis of focus group discussions with students and interviews with various experts such as a neighbourhood manager, an urban planner, a district mayor, a college president, a real estate manager.
Originality/value
To date, little research has been undertaken to empirically examine the specific requirements that German students look for in a place to live and study. According to the author’s present state of knowledge (January 2018), a comparable study has not been done.
The main contribution of this paper is the empirical analysis of what makes cities attractive to students. In contrast to the findings of Richard Florida about the Creative Class, the cleanliness of a city, beautiful city scenery, and attractive apartments are more important to students than cultural offers, interesting job opportunities, or a multicultural population.
Practical Implications
Insights from the empirical survey can both help to analyse important factors in students' decision-making process and provide possible measures that the city stakeholders can take.
Keywords
1. Knowledge-based urban development
2. Mobility decisions by students and skilled professionals
3. Location factors
4. Place branding
Proposed paper: Academic Research Paper
Hospice-Care-Modellkonzept - Entwicklung eines konzeptuellen Pflegemodells für stationäre Hospize
(2018)
Die Hospizpflege sieht sich zunehmend der Herausforderung gegenüber, ihr Selbstverständnis sowie ihre Individualität in ein theoriegeleitetes Handeln zu überführen, das in einem geeigneten Pflegemodell seinen Ausdruck finden kann. Bemüht man jedoch die gängige Pflegefachliteratur, so lassen sich kaum Hinweise auf ein hospizspezifisches Pflegemodell finden. Mitunter wird der Versuch unternommen, bereits bestehende, etablierte Pflegetheorien auf das pflegerische Hospizgeschehen zu übertragen, was häufig nur in Ansätzen gelingt. Einmal mehr stellt sich daher die Frage, ob Hospize für sich den Bedarf für ein hospizspezifisches Pflegemodell sehen, und wie dieses ausgestaltet werden kann.
Auf der Basis der Ergebnisse einer Interviewbefragung, an der bundesweit 190 stationäre Hospize teilnahmen, wird mit der vorliegenden Arbeit nun der Versuch unternommen, einen Entwurf für ein Pflegemodell für stationäre Hospize zu entwickeln. Das ‚Hospice-Care-Modell‘ bietet als konzeptuelles Modell erste Ansätze zu einem theoretischen Bezugs- oder Handlungsrahmen für die palliative Pflege und Betreuung sterbender Menschen und deren Zugehörigen. Dieser Bezugs- oder Handlungsrahmen gibt keine normativen Strukturen vor, sondern eröffnet theoriegeleitete Räume, die es ermöglichen, dem Sterbenden in der konkreten Pflegehandlung situativ, individuell, flexibel und intuitiv zu begegnen. Der Modellentwurf soll Anstoß und Anleitung für praktisches Handeln geben und zugleich zu einem besseren palliativen Pflegeverständnis beitragen. Er versteht sich als ein erster Schritt, eine theoriebasierte, hospizliche Pflegepraxis zu ermöglichen.