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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

A case-based learning approach for teaching undergraduate veterinary students about dairy herd health consultancy issues.

Journal:
Journal of veterinary medical education
Year:
2009
Authors:
Malher, Xavier et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Food Animal Health and Publid Health · France

Plain-English summary

At the Veterinary School of Nantes in France, a new teaching method called case-based learning was introduced for final-year veterinary students interested in working with farm animals, specifically focusing on dairy herd health. This program aimed to help students learn how to work as a team, communicate professionally, and understand the challenges faced by dairy farms. Students visited farms that had specific health issues, conducted health audits, and created action plans to improve the herd's health. They presented their findings to the farmers and a panel of experts, and the feedback from students, farmers, and industry professionals was very positive. Overall, the program was successful in enhancing the students' learning experience and practical skills.

Abstract

A case-based learning (CBL) format was implemented at the Veterinary School of Nantes, France, for veterinary students in their last year of the curriculum who had chosen to track toward a farm animal career. The focus of the CBL format was learning about dairy herd health consultancy. The goal was to emphasize teamwork among students, introduce professional communications and advisory relationships with clients, and work within the technical and economic limitations of participating farms. These farms volunteered to participate and had identified a problem. The learning objectives included gaining basic knowledge of herd-level diseases and the methods to control these within herds. The program focused on health audits of dairy farms performed by teams of four to five students, culminating in submission of a herd health management action plan specific for the farm visited by each team. The CBL program was comprised of defined learning objectives for each team. The learning process was supervised, from orientation through to validation, by a panel of experts from within the veterinary school and from local industry. Teams submitted written reports that listed recommendations and an action plan for implementation. This report was defended by each team in front of the farmers, their professional partners, and the panel of supervisors. Assessment of the program by students, participating farms, and industry professionals was positive.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19435987/