In modern medical education, lecturers serve as tutors who facilitate students in developing clinical reasoning, critical thinking, and learning independence through problem-based learning.
Grounded
in this need, UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta held a Problem Based Learning (PBL)
Tutor Workshop, attended by lecturers and laboratory technicians of the Medical
Study Program on Thursday (9/7/2026) at the Faculty of Medicine. The activity
forms part of the university's strategy in preparing for the operation of the
Medical Study Program while ensuring that the first cohort of students receives
a learning experience aligned with the standards of modern medical education.
The
workshop featured a team from the Faculty of Medicine of Universitas Diponegoro
(UNDIP) as the accompanying university. All material was designed not only to
strengthen conceptual understanding of Problem Based Learning, but also to
equip lecturers with the skills to become tutors capable of guiding students'
thinking processes in a systematic manner.
Opening
the workshop, Prof. Dr. dr. Tri Nur Kristina, D.M.M., M.Kes., explained that
modern medical education has shifted from teacher-centered learning toward
student-centered learning. Through this approach, students are encouraged to
actively identify problems, analyze cases, engage in discussion, learn
independently, and reflect on the knowledge they have acquired. This paradigm
shift positions the lecturer not as the primary source of information, but as a
facilitator who guides students in discovering knowledge and building their own
clinical reasoning.
“Students do not only know what needs to be studied;
they also understand how to study it and why that knowledge is important,” she explained.
She
affirmed that the success of Problem Based Learning implementation is greatly
determined by the quality of tutors in facilitating the learning process.
Tutors are not required to provide answers, but must be capable of stimulating
curiosity, directing discussion, and encouraging students to think critically
and systematically when confronting a clinical problem.
This
deepening of the tutor's role was further developed through a presentation by
Dr. dr. Neni Susilaningsih on the Seven Jumps in Problem Based Learning, the
tutorial discussion stages that form the primary framework in medical
education.
She
explained that the learning process unfolds through seven interconnected steps:
clarification of terms, identification of problems, analysis based on prior
knowledge, the formulation of hypotheses and concept maps, the setting of
learning objectives, independent learning, and the synthesis of learning
outcomes. These stages are designed to train students to think logically, systematically,
and on the basis of scientific reasoning.
The
success of this method, she argued, depends greatly on the tutor's ability to
maintain the dynamics of discussion without taking over the students' thinking
process.
“A tutor is not a lecturer, not an answer-provider,
and not an examiner. The tutor's role is to guide the learning process, pose
open-ended questions, maintain discussion dynamics, and serve as a model of
professionalism and ethics,” she said.
Meanwhile,
dr. Ryan Halleyantoro, M.Si., M.ed., Sp.Park., highlighted the importance of
preparing case scenarios (problem
setting) in Problem Based Learning. The quality of the scenario, he
explained, determines the quality of the students' learning process.
A
good scenario, he argued, does not merely present a clinical case; it must be
capable of prompting students to identify problems, formulate hypotheses,
search the scientific literature, and integrate multiple disciplines in
resolving the challenges they face.
“A scenario is not simply a question or a clinical
story; it is the primary trigger that drives students to think critically,
identify problems, search the scientific literature, and build knowledge
independently,” he explained.
The
workshop went beyond the delivery of presentations, continuing with a
simulation of a Problem Based Learning tutorial. In this session, one lecturer
played the role of tutor while the other participants took on the role of
students. Through the simulation, participants directly practiced techniques
for facilitating discussion, managing group dynamics, posing prompting
questions, and providing guidance without dominating the students' learning
process.
This
practice-based approach gave lecturers genuine experience of PBL implementation
as it will be applied in the learning process of UIN Sunan Kalijaga Medical
Study Program students.
The
strengthening of lecturer competency as tutors and facilitators forms one of
the important foundations in UIN Sunan Kalijaga's academic preparation ahead of
the commencement of Medical Study Program lectures.
Through
this workshop, the university ensures that the learning process is not only
oriented toward knowledge mastery, but also toward the formation of clinical
reasoning ability, critical thinking, collaboration, and independent learning,
competencies that serve as the primary provisions for students to develop as
professional, adaptive doctors capable of meeting the ever-evolving challenges
of healthcare delivery. (humassk)