Admission requirements
Bachelor degree and admission to Master Vitality & Ageing.
Description
This course provides students coming from diverse interdisciplinary and international backgrounds with relevant information related to personal development, interdisciplinary team work and academic thinking.
Personal and career development
A prominent focus will be professional career development. Students will develop and formulate their personal ambitions for their study and career and will formulate and fulfill a personally chosen learning objective for the Individual Learning Pathway (ILP). Mentoring will students facilitate to get insight in their personal strengths, weaknesses, wishes and possibilities, in order to make choices and maintain vital during work. Especially this year with extensive online education, frequent teacher-coaching will be implemented, as additional support for the student. Moreover, during the whole year a number of orientation visits will be arranged. The aim of these visits is to get to know organisations and the people who work there, what activities these organisations undertake in the field of vitality and ageing, and for orientation purposes on the job market. Workshops about job application, networking and CV writing will be offered.
Interdisciplinary teamwork
Throughout the year classes will be offered in which the students will deepen their knowledge and learn how to improve their skills. Students will become acquainted with basic models of personal efficiency, working in interdisciplinary and/or international teams. Through theoretical expansion and practical exercises students will also become acquainted with theories about successful leadership. Finally, in the last week of the Organisation of the Ageing Society module, a leadership game is organised in which all knowledge and skills acquired throughout the year will come together and can be put into practice.
Academic Thinking
In an intensive one week, students will become familiar with philosophical, ethical and legal principles and the implications for older individuals, ageing societies and the health care system. The students will relate these concepts to actual topics in the field of vitality and ageing.
Moreover, actual international themes around ageing and vitality will be discussed and debated during the year.
Overall, this course will give students a variety of exercises and lectures that deepen their knowledge in a wide selection of topics that will enable them to become pioneers of the ageing field.
Course objectives
The student:
is able to reflect on his/her personal and professional career development
is able to give and receive feedback at a professional level
is able to work in international and/or interdisciplinary teams, using the diversity of the skills of the team members.
shows insights into leadership styles and into managing conflicts of interest
is able to debate convincingly about actual topics in the field of vitality and ageing
discusses ethical and philosophical topics by using ethical arguments and philosophical concepts
is able to construct individual learning pathways
is able to formulate personal ambitions related to his/her professional career
is able to reflect on his/her personal and professional career development
Timetable
All course and group schedules are published on our LUMC scheduling website or on the LUMC scheduling app.
Mode of instruction
Interactive lectures, working groups and activities like assignments, practical exercises and orientation visits.
The educational line is integrated in the modules of the programme Vitality and Ageing throughout the year.
Assessment method
Portfolio regarding personal plans, mentor talks, orientation visits
Individual Learning Pathway (ILP)
Feedback assignment
Debates
Ethical/philosophical/legal assignment (AD week)
Leadership game
Completion of compulsory assignments described in the assessment plan
The leadership game is an integrated assessment with Organisation of the Ageing Society.
Grading
The final grade is based on portfolio (20%), Individual Learning Pathway (25%), two debates (10%), feedback assignment (10%), ethical/philosophical/legal assignment (AD week) (25%) and leadership game (10%). Credits will only be given if all compulsory assessments are completed.
Participation and attendance
Students are expected to actively engage in discussion of the content and in the activities scheduled in the programme.
Resit
If an assessment or mandatory component of the course is not passed or completed, the student will get a retake or revision or has to fulfil an alternative assignment.
Exam review
How and when a review of the assessments will take place will be disclosed together with the publication of the results at the latest.
More information will be published on Brightspace.
Reading list
Will be published on Brightspace.
Registration
All students will be automatically enrolled for workgroups and exams.
Contact
Dr. Yvonne M. Drewes. email: Y.M.Drewes@lumc.nl