JOINT PROFESSIONAL MILITARY EDUCATION: THE IMPACT OF BROADENED LEARNING ON MEDICAL STAFF OFFICERS

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Authors
Jenkins, Kenneth R.
Subjects
Joint Professional Military Education
JPME
medical staff officers
learning
education
Advisors
Tick, Simona L.
Date of Issue
2022-03
Date
Publisher
Monterey, CA; Naval Postgraduate School
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Abstract
Joint Professional Military Education, Phase I (JPME-I) is an underutilized educational opportunity among the Navy’s medical staff officers at a time of increasing jointness and complexity in the delivery of healthcare across the Military Health System. I employ a quantitative multivariate approach using individual-level personnel data from the Navy’s Officer Personnel Information System (OPINS) to study the 2001-2005 cohorts of Navy medical staff corps personnel to ascertain the relationship between JPME-I completion and an officer’s probability of promotion to O-4 and O-5. I find that the completion of JPME-I, by itself, has no significant predictive power on the probability of promotion but that JPME-I completion in combination with two other courses of professionally broadening education does predict higher likelihood of selection for promotion to both O-4 and O-5. Recent changes in the delivery of the JPME-I curriculum improve the convenience and efficiency for officers who choose to pursue this enriching course of study. Senior medical staff corps officers can enhance their subordinates’ professional development when they encourage the completion of JPME-I as part of a learning strategy that integrates a broad range of educational experiences.
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Distribution Statement
Approved for public release. Distribution is unlimited.
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This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
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