Index to Chiropractic Literature
Index to Chiropractic Literature
My ICL     Sign In
Saturday, April 27, 2024
Index to Chiropractic LiteratureIndex to Chiropractic LiteratureIndex to Chiropractic Literature
Share:


For best results switch to Advanced Search.
Article Detail
Return to Search Results
ID 27758
  Title ‘It’s not the battles we lose that bother me, it’s the ones we don’t suit up for’ [editorial]
URL https://www.apcj.net/site_files/4725/upload_files/EditorialOct202329Sep2022.pdf?dl=1
Journal Asia-Pac Chiropr J. 2023 Oct-Dec;4(2):11
Author(s)
Subject(s)
Peer Review No
Publication Type Editorial
Abstract/Notes

Narrative: In August 2023 RMIT University (Melbourne, Australia) announced it would cease delivering a program of chiropractic education. The program commenced in 1975 and was the first in the world to be funded by a National government. Today it is officially being ‘taught out’ and will cease to be in just 4 years.

As irresponsible as this decision may seem from a Chiropractor’s perspective, it remains RMIT’s right to determine which programs it delivers and those which it does not. The lesson the profession must learn is that state-funded universities can not be expected to reflect the passion that their education creates in its graduates, especially Chiropractors.

In past papers I have made this comment and now formalise and index it: ‘Australia’s publicly-funded institutions of higher education have no redeeming qualities to warrant them holding custody of a program of Chiropractic education’; they most certainly do not and can not replicate the integrity of a purpose-focussed private college nor match the integrity and academic commitment evident in many non-Australian universities throughout East Asia which are guided by a strong social conscience.

The usual claim is that a university with multiple disciplines provides cross-fertilisation of ideas and high levels of teaching quality from discipline experts in other fields, but in Australia this can not really be claimed to have been found true. There is also a claim that within a university Chiropractic academics will hone their scholarship, write, and publish; we know this is laughable.

RMIT has been far from exceptional for Chiropractic education for most of its 30 or so years as a university created by one political party’s agenda. It is healthy for the profession to now be forced into examining new models of education to better serve the profession and create a stronger professional identity.

Author keywords: Chiropractic - Accreditation - RMIT - Education - Professional identity - Future planning

This abstract is reproduced with the permission of the publisher; click on the above link for free full text. Online access only.


   Text (Citation) Tagged (Export) Excel
 
Email To
Subject
 Message
Format
HTML Text     Excel



To use this feature you must register a personal account in My ICL. Registration is free! In My ICL you can save your ICL searches in My Searches, and you can save search results in My Collections. Be sure to use the Held Citations feature to collect citations from an entire search session. Read more search tips.

Sign Into Existing My ICL Account    |    Register A New My ICL Account
Search Tips
  • Enclose phrases in "quotation marks".  Examples: "low back pain", "evidence-based"
  • Retrieve all forms of a word with an "asterisk*", also called a wildcard or truncation.  Example: "chiropract*" retrieves chiropractic, chiropractor, chiropractors
  • Register an account in My ICL to save search histories (My Searches) and collections of records (My Collections)
Advanced Search Tips