UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta's seriousness in building quality medical education is not only expressed through the fulfilment of institutional requirements and the provision of facilities and infrastructure; it is also demonstrated through investment in the quality of its human resources.
This
commitment was realized through the Problem Based Learning (PBL) Tutor and
Basic Clinical Skills (Keterampilan
Klinis Dasar/KKD) Instructor Workshop, organized by the UIN Sunan
Kalijaga Medical Study Program on Thursday (9/7/2026) to Friday (10/7/2026) at
the Faculty of Medicine. The event featured a team from the Faculty of Medicine
of Universitas Diponegoro (UNDIP), as the accompanying university, and was
attended by all lecturers and laboratory technicians of the Medical Study
Program.
The
workshop forms part of a strategic stage in ensuring that all teaching staff
share a common understanding of the learning system to be applied to the first
cohort of students. More than technical training, the activity is directed
toward building a learning paradigm that positions students as active learners,
while lecturers serve as facilitators who guide the process of clinical
thinking, the formation of professionalism, and sound decision-making.
The
Vice Rector for Academic Affairs and Institutional Development of UIN Sunan
Kalijaga, Prof. Dr. Istiningsih, expressed her appreciation to the Faculty of
Medicine of Universitas Diponegoro for the guidance provided since the
preparatory process for the establishment of the Medical Study Program through
to the stage of commencement of academic activities.
“We are now entering the preparation stage for
lectures in the Odd Semester of Academic Year 2026/2027. The first-wave
selection of Medical Study Program students has already been conducted, with a
quota of 50 students. What we are building is not only the first cohort, we are
building the long-term credibility of medical education at UIN Sunan Kalijaga,” she said.
The
quality of medical education, she argued, is determined from the very earliest
stages, from student selection and lecturer readiness through to the learning
system applied. Objectivity in student admissions and the conduct of academic
processes therefore remains a principle that continues to be upheld as the
foundation for producing professional and principled medical graduates.
Echoing
this, the Head of the General Administration and Finance Bureau (AUK), Dr. Ali
Sodiq, affirmed that the intensive guidance from the Faculty of Medicine of
Universitas Diponegoro has provided an important foundation for UIN Sunan
Kalijaga in building a quality medical education system.
“We are preparing the best doctors. That process
begins with the readiness of our lecturers and administrative staff today. The
knowledge and skills gained through this workshop are vital provisions in
accompanying students throughout the educational process,” he said.
Over
the two days of the workshop, lecturers and laboratory technicians of the
Medical Study Program received comprehensive preparation on the key components
of competency-based medical education. The sessions began with the
strengthening of Problem Based Learning (PBL) implementation as the primary
approach in medical education. Lecturers deepened their understanding of PBL
philosophy, the seven-jump tutorial stages, the preparation of case scenarios (problem setting), and the application
of team-based learning as a collaborative strategy to foster critical thinking,
clinical reasoning, communication, and teamwork.
The
workshop also strengthened lecturers' capacity as Basic Clinical Skills (KKD)
instructors. Participants were equipped with techniques for demonstrating
clinical procedures in the skills laboratory, guiding students in mastering
skills progressively, and providing effective feedback so that the learning
process proceeds safely, systematically, and in an orientation toward
competency achievement.
Competency
strengthening did not stop at the delivery of material. Through a series of
simulation sessions, participants directly practiced their roles as PBL tutors
and KKD instructors, learning to facilitate tutorial discussions, manage group
dynamics, develop questions that promote students' clinical reasoning, guide
clinical skills practice, and provide feedback objectively as occurs in medical
education.
Assessment
was also a key focus of the workshop. Participants were trained in preparing
competency-based evaluation instruments, from developing blueprints and
Multiple Choice Question (MCQ) items, to formulating Objective Structured
Clinical Examination (OSCE) blueprints with their scoring rubrics, and
understanding the principles of serving as an OSCE examiner who is objective,
standardized, and capable of comprehensively measuring students' competency
achievement. As a practical implementation, participants also prepared draft
MCQ questions and OSCE stations ready for use in the learning evaluation
process.
This
series of workshop activities demonstrates the seriousness of UIN Sunan
Kalijaga's efforts to make human resources one of the important pillars of the
Medical Study Program. A lecturer is not only required to be capable of
teaching; they must also design case-based learning experiences, facilitate student-centered
learning, guide the mastery of clinical skills, and conduct assessments
objectively in accordance with the standards of medical education.
Through
the systematic strengthening of lecturer and laboratory technician capacity,
UIN Sunan Kalijaga is building a robust academic foundation for the operation
of the Medical Study Program, a strategic step toward creating a learning
ecosystem capable of integrating the mastery of biomedical sciences, clinical
reasoning, practical skills, professionalism, and medical ethics. The goal is
to produce medical graduates who are adaptive to advances in knowledge and
responsive to the needs of public health services. (humassk)