TUFH Teaching Fellows 2025

Aligning Education with Social Accountability 

Overview: TUFH is moving the Health Workforce Education for the Public Good (HWEPG) course into regional centers. The purpose of this TUFH Teaching Fellowship program is to work in partnership with education leaders so they can adapt the current online HWEPG course and implement it in their region. We anticipate that participants will have curriculum design and teaching skills to share with others in the program. Materials from the current HWEPG course will be freely available to participants to modify or use intact. HWEPG course values – participants learn from and with each other, a focus on application of knowledge, and emphasis on local authenticity of content – are maintained, while the program is adapted by participants to meet local needs.

TUFH Teaching Fellowship Objectives:
By the end of this Fellowship, participants will be able to …

  1. Create a plan and gather a team for developing and implementing a customized course
  2. Write clear, measurable objectives for their program and define modules to achieve them.
  3. Update the tufh.org platform with readings, objectives, discussions relevant to their setting (or develop an alternative platform)
  4. Conduct a live online session that creates a supportive environment, engages participants, and encourages learning from each other
  5. Support faculty to develop or use the levers of change in education, e.g., accreditation, program evaluation, leadership, research
  6. Help faculty develop and implement local projects that promote alignment with community needs

The Current HWEPG Program:
In the current HWEPG program, four courses are offered in sequence. In the first course, Social Accountability, we encourage participants to think about problems, needs, or opportunities in their environment, grounding those initial thoughts in empiric data about their community, and in existing research on relevant issues. In Appreciative Inquiry and Resilience, they will use the 4D model of appreciative inquiry to imagine an innovation to address this problem and its pathway to implementation. The following course, Interprofessional Education, asks them to consider the stakeholders, including the community, who will have input into their thinking about the pressing local problems or opportunities. Finally, in Transformative Leadership, participants will develop an “outcomes chain,” also called a “theory of change,” for a local innovation project which will lead to a process for evaluation. The adapted regional programs may contain all four courses or fewer if deemed appropriate.

Current HWEPG Objectives:

  1. Apply leadership skills to develop, implement, and evaluate innovations that enhance institutional commitment to community health.
  2. Work with teams at their institutions and across institutions to promote social accountability.
  3. Use the ISAT instrument to organize an institutional self-assessment of progress toward social accountability.
  4. Collaborate with community leaders to educate the health workforce.
  5. Co-develop research with the community that benefits community health.
  6. Work with rural and remote communities to enhance health through workforce development.
  7. Align education with health systems and health practice to strengthen teamwork and collaborative care.
  8. Develop, apply, and monitor institutional accreditation standards for community integration in decision-making.

These may be refined as participants develop ideas for their local program.

Participants

TUFH Teaching Fellows are a diverse, transnational network of leaders, activists, innovators, thinkers, and doers within health workforce entities.  We recognize the educational expertise of participants and envision this program as an opportunity to share ideas.  We anticipate welcoming up to 20 Senior Fellows.

Logistics:

  1. Six weekly 2 hour online sessions with readings and discussion on tufh.org on
    Wednesdays from 2 – 4 PM UTC (some timing flexibility is possible)
  2. Modules include:
  • Mechanics, and resources of the current program: readings, forum, presentations, faculty guides
  • The public good – how do we know what it is, how do we continuously align education with it
  • Tools of change – appreciative inquiry, leadership
  • Tools for working together – connection with community, teamwork across sectors
  • Project development, implementation, and evaluation
  • Capstone presentations: customized faculty development program and evaluation plan


Timing:

  • December 15, 2025: Applications Close
  • January 15, 2025: Fellow Selection
  • February 19, 2025: Teaching Fellowship Launch
  • February 26 – April 2, 2025: Fellowship Program (six weekly 2 hour sessions ending with Capstone Presentations)
  • April – June 2025: Individual or Group Mentoring on Regional Initiatives

 

Application Requirements:

  • In a brief paragraph, describe how your interest in being a TUFH 2025 Teaching Fellow relates to your career goals and your plans for potential local delivery of the HWEPG program.
  • An Institutional Support Letter indicating their support and institutional commitment to this fellowship.
  • CV

 

Cost:
Free for TUFH members.
50% of the individual membership fee for non-members.
https://thenetworktufh.org/membership/

If you have any questions please secretariat@thenetworktufh.org