In 1998 three Danish universities developed an interdisciplinary, problem‐oriented curriculum in order to strengthen capacity‐building capabilities in the area of environmental education, training and research at universities and research organisations in Malaysia and Thailand earmarked for environment and development assistance by the Danish government. The programme, which was partly implemented in developing countries as periods of fieldwork, represented important educational innovations. The purpose of this study was to evaluate these activities. The distinct principles forming the educational foundation of the programme were identified. These related to the curriculum organization, the learning tasks and the learning environment. The first step in a cogent evaluation process was to examine how the educational principles were oprerationalized into practical teaching/learning steps. In the next step, they formed the criteria for the evaluation. On the basis of quantitative and qualitative data it was shown that the programme fulfilled the stipulated accademic requirements.
A randomly selected group of teachers, students, first-year graduates (junior doctors in the first year of postgraduate training after their final medical school examination), general practitioners and specialists responded to a postal questionnaire designed to assess their views on the priorities in medical curriculum and the educational value attributed to its content. Comparisons were made among the five participating groups and the outcome of the assessment was compared with the existing curriculum.
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