Medical students need to be accustomed to independent learning, working in teams, articulating arguments, and applying knowledge to resolve clinical problems. Team-Based Learning (TBL) was one of the key focuses of the PBL Tutor and Basic Clinical Skills Instructor Workshop held on Thursday (9/7/2026) at the Faculty of Medicine Building.
The
activity was attended by lecturers and laboratory technicians of the UIN Sunan
Kalijaga Medical Study Program, featuring a team from the Faculty of Medicine
of Universitas Diponegoro as the accompanying university. The workshop forms
part of a series of preparations for the medical education learning system; one
that positions students as active learners in developing clinical reasoning,
collaborative skills, and decision-making ability in medical practice.
As
the resource person, dr. Muflihatul Muniroh, M.Si.Med., Ph.D., explained that
Team-Based Learning is a learning approach that places students as active
participants in the learning process. Students do not simply receive
explanations from lecturers; they first prepare themselves, study references,
understand the scenario, and bring that prior knowledge into group discussion.
“The competencies that have been determined need to
be translated into a planned learning process. Lecturers must therefore prepare
material, construct scenarios, determine references, and design student
readiness evaluations before learning begins,”
she explained.
According
to dr. Liha, the initial test in TBL is not merely a grading tool. Its results
help lecturers map students' understanding, identify areas still requiring
clarification, and make the conduct of discussions and practice more focused.
When
students arrive with adequate preparation, she continued, the learning process
can unfold more smoothly. Students become more willing to express opinions,
raise questions, respond to their peers' thinking, and connect the concepts
they are studying with the issues under discussion.
As
a facilitator, dr. Liha also noted, lecturers must be able to direct students
toward academically credible references, particularly relevant textbooks and
scientific sources. In this way, students do not only obtain information, but
simultaneously learn to search for, evaluate, and use references appropriately.
“Learning in a team is indeed a challenge for
students. But when the process is facilitated well, learning can become more
enjoyable and help them understand the material more deeply than studying
alone,” she said.
These
principles align with the direction of learning development in the UIN Sunan
Kalijaga Medical Study Program, which positions Team-Based Learning as one of
the strategic approaches in building student competencies.
This
competency is closely related to the reality of healthcare delivery, which
involves collaborative work across professions. In practice, doctors do not
work alone; they interact with other health workers, patients, families, and
the community.
Team-based
learning is therefore not merely a teaching method; it is also an early space
for shaping professional culture. Students are accustomed to preparing
themselves, contributing within a team, respecting opinions, being accountable
for their arguments, and reflecting on the learning process.
Ultimately,
Team-Based Learning does not only change how lecturers teach, but it also changes
how students learn. It is from within those discussion spaces that students are
trained to arrive prepared, think together, test their understanding, and take
responsibility for the knowledge they will one day apply in healthcare
delivery. (humassk)