A short description of the event What you will learn: how to work in a multi professional team, how to write a research project proposal with relevance to patients in different healthcare professions, what is known about parkinson's Disease, what is not known about Parkinson's Disease, what methods are used to address the unknowns, how to review a research proposal. Next to this you will receive coaching and training of experienced student trainers on the process of teamwork and on leadership. You will receive guidance and coaching from academic experts and patients! This sounds like hard work... will it be fun? We plan social activities nearly every night. So you get to know all participants well and see a bit of the surrounding environment. Work hard and play hard! You are participating in the 3rd event of it's kind. Our challenge is to be better and to do a better job than we could possibly do at home. We hope to create a truly energizing and inspiring summerschool, so you can exceed your own expectations. Imagine that we could amaze patients, professors and the industry sponsors, by generating original high quality research proposals in a way never done before! Indeed 3rd Summer School: Adana, Turkey 2009, Ljubljana, Slovenia 2010, Now: Warsaw, Poland 2011. We do this annually as the concept is challenging and successful! Organised by whom? EPSA, ENSA, EMSA and EFPSA How: you will work in small teams of 5-10 students. Every day you produce a presentation of your day of work, to present to experts. Teachers: you will get very few formal lectures. You will do most of the work yourself. You will be guided by our team of trainers. Academic experts will review the outcome of your efforts on the end of every day. Outcome: during the summerschool every team (3 teams) will produce a well referenced innovative and creative research proposal. Review of Our Work: Healthcare professionals among which academic experts in research and clinical work as well as patients and carers will review the outcomes of our work, so we can reflect on the quality of the outcomes of our efforts. Certificate: all participants will receive a certificate of attendance What next? You could present a poster of the outcome of your work on a conference, you could try to do a PhD on the topic, you could use the skills you learned in a whole other context. What will you take home for sure? an intense teamwork experience, where you will be challenged both cognitively as well as while working in a team. You will feel the true intensity of teamwork and the challenges it poses to work with others and achieve a common goal. Costs: Check Fees (including food 3 times a day, accomodation and social programme), Travel expenses are not included. BackgroundIntroductionThere is an increasing notion among students that professional boundaries and unproductive hierarchical structures are an obstacle to progress in improvement of healthcare. Exploding costs of healthcare, introduction of market mechanisms in healthcare and aging of European society, demand for fresh perspectives and activism from the side of students in order to strengthen networks and to build bridges towards change and improvement of sustainable and accessible healthcare.Through teamwork between different healthcare professionals, patients, industry, improvement of leadership skills and active citizenship, students will contribute to solutions for current problems. The World Healthcare students’ Symposium of 2005, 2007, 2009 gathered around 300 students from all over Europe to increase the notion of the need of teamwork in healthcare. Within the spirit of these events, the inspiration for the development of the educational concept of the Parkinson's Disease Summer School grew. The first Bologna Process workshop for healthcare students in 2008, created the first European statement with a sectoral focus on education reform. Education seems to be the key to solutions of many problems in healthcare. With the first European Leadership Summerschool in 2008 in Ankara, 17 international students organisations decided to come together and share their best practices in leadership training, to improve leadership skills of student all over Europe. During this event, the first European Parkinson’s Disease summerschool was born. The legacy of Leadership Summer School events continued (www.leadershipsummerschool.org). There’s an increasing notion that flattening of hierarchical structures, breaking down professional boundaries, sharing of knowledge and sharing of responsibilities are the building bricks of the professional lifes of the future generations. Web 2.0 and new technologies move us forward in this direction with a tremendous speed. Knowledge previously only accessible for an academic elite, becomes accessible to alll. With knowledge however, comes responsibilty. Students seem to be eager to take this responsibility and to contribute. Each of the Participants of the Parkinson's Disease Summer Schools in 2009 and 2010 increased their engagement in the world around them while making the transition from student to professional. |
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Clippings 2011
Kwartalnik Parkinson - Polska Nr 4(5)/2011 MANAGER APTEKI (Polish language) (English translation) Clippings 2010 Clippings 2009MANAGER APTEKI, page 16 (Polish language) (English translation) MEDICINSKI RAZGLEDI, year 48, 2009/4 (Slovenian language) TREPETLIKA, issue 23, page 14 and 15 (Slovenian language) ADANA NEWSPAPER, page 22 (Turkish language)
Thank youThis news announcement is a thank you to the Local Organizing Committee of the first European Parkinson's Disease Summerschool for healthcare students, the team of Supervisors of Çukurova University, the international agenda committee of students representing European associations of nursing, medicine, pharmacy and psychology (ENSA, EMSA, EPSA, EFPSA) and the team of trainers whom supported the participants with training and coaching interventions. The contributions of our experts whom joined us in Adana as well as our reviewers from The Netherlands, Romania, Poland and Turkey were highly appreciated! Next to this we would like to thank the organisations EPDA (European Parkinson's Disease Association) and EAN (European Neuroscience Nursing Association) for their trust in us. A seperate note of appreciation is dedicated to our sponsors. Each of the individuals and organisations whom contributed their time to this event, have contributed to inspiration, creativity and motivation in Parkinson's Disease research, teamwork in healthcare and innovation in education. We hope in the upcoming years to show you that this will lead to improved academic leadership, improved education and to serious contributions to Parkinson's Disease research and improvement of healthcare. |





