| dc.description.abstract |
Competency-based education is a design of teaching and learning that emphasizes
the demonstration and application of specific competencies or skills by learners. The
practice of medicine becomes increasingly complex each passing year. Despite the
affordance of CBE in preparing learners for the challenges of the 21st century, its
implementation in Africa continues to be more challenging. This study examined the
challenges and opportunities influencing the implementation of Integrated
Competency-Based Medical Education (ICBME) in selected Kenya Medical Training
College campuses in Western Kenya. The study was guided by Lev Vygotsky’s social
constructivism theory, which explains learning as a socially mediated process shaped
through interaction, collaboration, and guided practice. A cross-sectional descriptive
survey design was adopted, focusing on quantitative data collected from tutors and
diploma students in clinical medicine. The study was conducted in three randomly
selected campuses (Busia, Kakamega, and Webuye) drawn from nine campuses in the
region. A census approach yielded a target population of 396 respondents. Data were
collected using structured questionnaires and analyzed using descriptive statistics
(frequencies and percentages) and inferential statistics (Chi-square tests). Findings
showed that inadequate resources was the dominant challenge, reported by 75.0%
of tutors and 73.6% of students, followed by faculty shortages and large class sizes.
Other constraints included resistance to change, limited clinical opportunities,
assessment challenges, and financial limitations. Chi-square results indicated no
significant differences between tutors and students across all challenge variables (p
> 0.05), showing consistent perceptions across groups. Key opportunities included
government support and healthcare partnerships (about 20% each), followed by
technological advancements and faculty development programs. High agreement on
the presence of opportunities (over 95% for both groups) reflected strong
Journal of Research in Education and
Technology
4(1)
Received: January 24, 2026
Accepted: March 20, 2026
Published: March 27, 2026
Masinde et al.
52
Original Article
4(1), 2026
stakeholder awareness of enabling factors. The study concludes that ICBME
implementation faces major structural and resource-related barriers, despite the
presence of strong policy and institutional support mechanisms. It recommends
targeted investment in infrastructure, expansion of clinical training opportunities and
structured faculty development to strengthen implementation outcomes and
produce competent healthcare graduates capable of meeting Kenya's Universal
Health Coverage goals. |
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