The undergraduate field-research experience in Global Health: Study abroad, service learning, professional training or 'none of the above'?

in Learning and Teaching
Author:
Kearsley A. Stewart

Search for other papers by Kearsley A. Stewart in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

Interest in short-term international placements in global health training for U.S.-based medical students is growing; the trend is mirrored for global health undergraduate students. Best practices in field-based global health training can increase success for medical students, but we lack a critical framework for the undergraduate global health field experience. In what ways does an undergraduate field experience in global health resemble a medical student's first international health elective? Is it more similar to a study-abroad programme or a service-learning experience with a focus on personal development, civic responsibility and community engagement? This article suggests that an undergraduate global health field experience contains features of both the international medical elective and a traditional service-learning programme. I analyse a case study of a short-term U.S.-based undergraduate global health project and explore the intersections of research, professional training and service learning.

  • Collapse
  • Expand