
Dear Colleagues,
It is a privilege to welcome you to our upcoming conference, “Re-imagining Health Professions Education for Equity, Impact and Innovation.” As the Department of Health Sciences Education, we are honoured to host this timely gathering of educators, researchers, clinicians, students, and thought leaders who share a commitment to shaping the future of health professions education (HPE) in ways that are bold, equitable, and informed by evidence.
Health professions education is at a pivotal moment. Across the globe, shifting health needs, growing inequities, rapid technological change, and evolving educational landscapes compel us to critically examine how we teach, what we teach, and why we teach. This conference invites us to pause, reflect, and reimagine—together—what HPE can and must become in the face of these complex demands.
At the core of our theme lies the understanding that HPE must be continuously refreshed through scholarship, reflection, and innovation. To equip future health professionals with the skills, values, and adaptability that they need to serve diverse populations requires a continued reflection and commitment to re-evaluate their own practices. This includes staying abreast of emerging evidence, advancing inclusive pedagogies, and strengthening our capacity to engage in meaningful, lifelong professional development. We must strive to adapt our curricula, teaching methods, and assessment strategies based on best evidence practices, considering our deep sense of social responsibility.
Equity is not an add-on—it is foundational. Re-imagining HPE means confronting historical and ongoing injustices, decolonising educational content, and ensuring access and success for all students, particularly those from historically marginalised groups. We must ask difficult questions about who gets to learn, who gets to teach, whose knowledge is valued, and how systems of power shape educational experience. This conference is a space to share work that not only exposes inequities but actively works to redress them within a conducive institutional climate.
In parallel, the technological frontier—especially the advent of artificial intelligence—presents both opportunities and challenges for HPE. AI has the potential to personalise learning, streamline assessments, and expand access to high-quality educational tools. Yet it also raises critical questions around ethics, bias, data privacy, and the risk of widening digital divides. As educators and scholars, we must engage with these tools critically and creatively, ensuring that technology enhances rather than undermines the human dimensions of learning and healthcare.
Considering our context, we call for presentations that are grounded in scholarly inquiry, practical innovation, and a commitment to transformation. We welcome contributions that explore curriculum reform, inclusive teaching practices, competency-based education, digital innovation, the role of AI, faculty development, and assessment strategies—especially those that demonstrate how theory and practice can come together to produce meaningful change. Whether through empirical research, theoretical reflection, or experiential insight, your work can help shape the discourse and direction of HPE.
This conference is not just an event—it is a collective endeavour offering an opportunity to collaborate across disciplines to challenge assumptions, share lessons, and to co-create a vision for HPE that is responsive, resilient, and just. We invite emerging and established voices alike to contribute, and we look forward to the rich conversations and connections that will emerge.
Thank you for joining us on this journey of re-imagination. We look forward to learning from you and with you.
Warm regards,
Jacky van Wyk: Head of Department
Department of Health Sciences Education
Meet the Speakers

Professor Susan van Schalkwyk
Susan van Schalkwyk, M Phil, PhD., is Emeritus Professor in Health Professions Education and former Executive Head of the Department of Health Professions Education in the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at Stellenbosch University, South Africa. Susan is a B2 rated researcher with the National Research Foundation in South Africa and a fellow of the international Association of Medical Educationalists (AMEE). Her main research interests lie with postgraduate education and academic writing, although much of her work has been in curriculum renewal underpinned by transformative learning theories. She has been acknowledged by Stellenbosch University as a distinguished teacher, a Teaching Fellow and in 2023 with a Chancellor’s Award for her service to the institution. In 2024 she received the Harmen Tiddens Award from University Medical Centre Utrecht for her achievements in the field of health professions education.
Past Winners
Research Day 2024 Winners
Research Day 2024 Winners

Dr. Jaisubash Jayakumar
CHSE Research Day 2024 1st Place Prize Winner
More info
Dr. Jaisubash Jayakumar is a senior lecturer in medical education in the Department of Pathology at the University of Cape Town (UCT). He holds a PhD in Clinical Sciences and Immunology, as well as a Postgraduate Diploma in Educational Technology, both from UCT.
In his academic role, he serves as the co-course convenor for MBChB Semesters 4 and 5, playing a central role in curriculum design, educational leadership, and pedagogical innovation.Dr. Jayakumar also co-chairs the Faculty of Health Sciences Transformation and Equity Committee, where he champions initiatives aimed at fostering inclusion, equity, and systemic change within higher education. His teaching philosophy is deeply rooted in humanising pedagogies that emphasise student-centred learning, decoloniality, and social justice. His research interests span transformation in higher education, undergraduate medical education, inclusive pedagogical practices, and technology-enhanced learning. A committed mentor and advocate for academic development, Dr. Jayakumar is passionate about supporting students' growth both within and beyond the classrooms.

Drs. Haniem Salie, Sakeena Ebrahim, Robert Gill and Francois Marais
CHSE Research Day 2024 2nd Place Prize Winner
Dr. Robert Gill
Dr Robert Gill is a Specialist Physician and Lecturer at Groote Schuur Hospital and the University of Cape Town. He convenes two Medicine modules in the MBChB Year 4 programme. He teaches fourth and sixth year students as well as medical registrars. He has a keen interest in Health Professionals Education as well as assessment techniques in medical undergraduates.
Dr. Sakeena Ebrahim
I am a Specialist Physician and Clinical Lecturer at the University of Cape Town (UCT) and Groote Schuur Hospital (GSH), with a strong focus on clinical medicine, medical education, and academic leadership. I completed my MBChB at UCT in 2009 and subsequently earned my Fellowship of the College of Physicians (FCP) in 2019, and master’s in medicine in 2024. Since 2020, I have been based at Mitchells Plain Hospital, where I serve as site convenor and lead both clinical and educational initiatives.
I convene the final-year (6th year) undergraduate medicine course and co-convene the Nelson Mandela Fidel Castro (NMFC) medical students programme in Internal Medicine. I play an integral role in clinical teaching, curriculum development, and medical education, with a particular interest in workplace-based assessments. My academic work includes presenting research at national congresses such as SAGES and SAAHE.
I am passionate about advancing both patient care and medical education and achieve this by combining my roles as a clinician, educator and convenor in the clinical space.
Dr. Francois Marais
Academic Coordinator & Lecturer for the Eden Teaching Platform.
Current Role:
Part time Overseer of the longitudinal final year medical training programme for UCT in the Garden Route District. Still involved in clinical work for the WDOH as a sessional doctor on the primary care platform of the George Sub-District.
Teaching Interests:
Longitudinal Clerkships & Formative Assessments , Simulation & Skills Training , Family & Rural Medicine

Mr. Joshua Gaunt, Zuko Bhana, Azania Mpendukane, Enkosi Ntame, Lutho Pikok, Judy Mahlangu and Somikazi Deyi
CHSE Research Day 2024 3rd Place Prize Winner
More info
We are a group of five 3rd-year, Xhosa-speaking medical students who wondered if there was a different way of teaching isiXhosa to second-language learners. We ran a series of workshops testing a peer-based and task-based teaching approach as part of our Special Studies Module (SSM). Although very limited in its size and duration, our qualitative pilot study showed positive engagement and confidence-building amongst 1st year participants learning isiXhosa for the first time.
Research Day 2023 Winners
Research Day 2023 Winners

Dr. Michelle Hannington
CHSE Research Day 2023 2st Place Prize Winner
More info
Michelle is a Senior Clinical Educator in the Division of Occupational Therapy, and a consultant for the FHS Writing Lab. She has always had a love of teaching and completed her PGDip in Health Science Education in 2020. Since then she has been involved in several areas of curriculum transformation and completed the educational leadership fellowship in 2022.
Michelle enjoys many areas of health professions education, but has a special interest in assessment, philosophies of teaching, decolonisation and innovative teaching approaches. She is currently busy with her PhD in HPE which is focused on developing a philosophy of assessment for OT education in South Africa. She has presented her work at both national and international conferences. She also sits on the SAAHE research SIG committee.
Michelle has a passion for making education both accessible and enjoyable, that each student can reach their full potential through a curriculum that leaves them excited to be healthcare professionals in South Africa and eager to be lifelong learners.

Dr. Chiv Gordon
CHSE Research Day 2023 2nd Place Prize Winner

Dr. Natashia Muna
CHSE Research Day 2023 3rd Place Prize Winner
More info
My background is in science, with a BSc (hons) in Biodiversity and Zoology, and an MSc and PhD in Molecular and Cell Biology. However, during my PhD while working as a student consultant (tutor) at the UCT Writing Centre, I developed a strong interest in the literacies practices of science domains which motivated a shift in my career trajectory. In 2015 I was appointed as Director of the Faculty of Health Sciences Writing Lab which provides dedicated academic literacies support, teaching and capacity development for staff and students across the faculty.
Although much of the Writing Lab work is service-orientated and student-facing, an important part of our internal-facing work is the training and professional development of the postgraduate students appointed as Writing Lab consultants. It is this work that was the focus of our CHSE 2023 presentation, ‘Reimagining writing centre consultant training’.
It was my great honour to share some of the key outcomes of the collaborative work that the Writing Lab team have produced over the last few years in terms of establishing, piloting, and reflecting on the development of an authentic and values-based approach to professional learning. The full study has been published in the recent volume, Reimagining Writing Centre Practices: a South African perspective, edited by Avasha Rambiritch and Laura Drennan, and the chapter can be directly accessed here.
Research Day Winners

Dr Charle Viljoen
CHSE Research Day winner 2016 and 2018
More Info
Dr Charle Viljoen is a keen teacher and enjoys working on educational innovations. He strongly supports research in medical education, as he believes this would address contemporary educational challenges and support Evidence-Based Education. Research in medical education enhances teaching methods, improves curricular design, encourages innovation and the adoption of new technologies and approaches. The aim of improved teaching and training is to guarantee competence and ultimately to ensure the delivery of better medical care. His academic career milestones include accolades in both the clinical and education field.
Charle is a cardiologist and specialist physician in Cape Town, South Africa. He obtained the degree MBChB (with distinction) from the University of Pretoria, with the highest marks in the final year of study. After completing his masters degree in Internal Medicine at the University of Cape Town, he continued training in Cardiology at Groote Schuur Hospital. Charle has a special interest in arrhythmias and heart failure, and supervises several doctoral, masters and honours research projects at UCT. In 2018 he was awarded the International Resident Leadership Award by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. He is currently doing a fellowship in Electrophysiology.
For his doctoral research, Dr Viljoen evaluated the impact of novel teaching methods in electrocardiography. Under the guidance of his PhD supervisors, and with the support of a collaboration between the Divisions of Cardiology and Clinical Skills at UCT, Charle created an online ECG learning platform (ecgonline.uct.ac.za). Since the launch of the first version of ECG ONLINE, the web application has been accessed by more than two thousand students. The online ECG curriculum is based on the training priorities suggested by a Delphi study that Dr Viljoen conducted for his PhD at UCT. Moreover, the use of the web application as part of a blended learning strategy was shown to be more effective for the acquisition and retention of ECG competence.
Charle is also the principal author and developer of the ECG reference app, ECG APPtitude (available for free from the App Store and Google Play). Since its original launch in 2017, the ECG app has been downloaded and used by over 30,000 users worldwide. The new version of this teaching app offers the educational content in English, French, German, Portuguese and Spanish. During a study on the utility of mobile learning, it was showed that using ECG APPtitude required less time than searching the Internet and ensured better ECG diagnostic accuracy.

Heather Talberg
CHSE Research Day Winner 2011 and 2017
More Info
I came to education by default. With a clinical background in musculoskeletal and orthopaedics physiotherapy, I was at first asked by the Physiotherapy Division to assist with the teaching and clinical education in these fields. Since then, I have never left!
My journey in the field of education started when I won my first recognition at a FHS Health Science Education Research Day in 2011, presenting work on how clinical educators were being incorporated into clinical teaching in Physiotherapy. This passion for clinical education and how we could improve the experiences for UG students has shaped my focus through my career. I completed a MPhil in Higher Education Studies through CHED in 2012. I was fortunate to be able to complete a SAFRI fellowship between 2014 and 2015, exploring as a project aspect of the clinical training curriculum linked to community placements. During this period as a clinical platform convenor, I was able to facilitate structured changes in the clinical training of physio students. I was co-lead on a TDG Faculty development project in the DHRS between 2014-2018 which looked at specific training for clinical educators across the DHRS in guiding clinical reasoning in students. This project was presented as a poster at AMEE and won the FHS Health Science research day award in 2017.
Leaving my clinical education role, I moved back into classroom teaching in 2018, taking up a full-time position of lecturer in the Division of Physiotherapy. I am currently the Undergraduate Programme convenor for the Division. However, my own educational journey continues: I was part of the FHS’ first ELF (Educational Leadership Fellowship) programme in 2022 and am currently using this platform to look at how our curriculum prepares graduates for practice in the SA context.
Faculty of Health Sciences Teaching Excellence Awards

Dr Jason Marcus
FHS Teaching Excellence Award winner: 2019
More Info
I was honoured to receive the Faculty’s Excellence in Teaching award in 2019, usually these are celebrated in the following year but COVID prevented that. The upside was that the award carried a monetary grant which came in very handy to develop online learning materials for the remote T&L which we were required to do. I was able to lead and fund the development of an open resource on how to complete and use the partogram (a labour monitoring tool) and gravidogram (a pregnancy growth monitoring tool). The challenges posed by COVID to the teaching and learning enterprise was mitigated by harnessing the learnings over the preceding years formally and informally, the encouragement of colleagues and the IT savvy students (who can be worthwhile contributors to the teaching enterprise).
I currently serve as the course convenor for the Obstetrics component of the Perinatal Health block in Semester 6 of the MBChB programme. I am the course convenor for the Year 4 Obstetrics course. I also convene the Nelson Mandela-Fidel Castro training programme in the Faculty of Health Sciences. In my time as a convenor and teacher in the faculty I have had the opportunity to complete a MPhil in Health Professions Education and SAFRI fellowship. Both these have opened my mind to the possibilities in creating/developing/strengthening the learning experiences of students. In this the patient, who is also a de facto teacher, becomes centred with the student in the learning encounter where my role is to facilitate these to be meaningful to both the patient and student. Contextualising the environment in which the student will be practicing as an intern and community service medical officer is crucial in preparing them for the world outside of the Western Cape. Providing context also creates a less vacuous approach to learning as they are led on a path that shows the value of the knowledge and skills they are developing in serving their patients.
I found my niche in the development of teaching emergency obstetric care in simulated environments following a stint as the technical lead for implementation of and national trainer in the Essential Steps in Managing Obstetric Emergencies (ESMOE) programme. The role has given me an opportunity to gain insights into the varied conditions of facilities and ability of staff across all the provinces in the country. These insights inform my course design to ensure that the students develop the critical knowledge, skills and attitudes to best serve our population.

Dr Amaal Abrahams
FHS Teaching Excellence Award winner: 2018
More Info
I am currently a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Human Biology with an interest in curriculum design and academic support programmes. In 2007, I obtained my PhD in Medical Biochemistry from UCT. Following my PhD, I took up a postdoctoral position at the University of Rennes, France, and in 2009 returned to South Africa to take up a postdoctoral fellowship in the Department of Human Biology at UCT. In 2012, I was awarded the highly competitive Hasso Plattner Foundation research officer position which afforded me the opportunity to develop as an independent researcher. This enabled me to successfully compete for a lecturing position within the Department of Human Biology in 2014 which is when my passion to be an educator was ignited.
My educational philosophy is geared towards promoting student-centred learning in which I see my role as a facilitator. Using different interactive teaching and learning strategies I aim to encourage rational discourse and critical reflection. I am committed towards inclusive education where curricula are designed to accommodate the needs of students of diverse backgrounds rather than forcing students to adapt to a fixed curriculum. Over the years as an educator, I have introduced and developed innovative teaching and learning strategies to promote student success and development. My research has focused on the conceptualisation and development of peer-led tutorial programmes, an Anatomy and Physiology baseline assessment for all first year’s students and formative learning tools to enhance students’ understanding of anatomy and physiology.
In 2015, my passion and research interests led me to complete a Postgraduate Diploma in Health Professional Education. Looking back, I am grateful to have completed the diploma as it provided me opportunities to critically engage and reflect on my role as an educator. Importantly, I was privileged to establish collaborations with colleagues in DHSE which has led to joint publication outputs. In 2021, I was accepted into a national Teaching Advancements at Universities (TAU) Fellowship programme which strives to build and support the professional development of academics as scholars, change-driven leaders, and mentors, in teaching and learning.
Over the years, a common theme in the initiatives I have undertaken has been to positively contribute to practices that have enhanced teaching and learning. I have achieved this by surrounding myself with passionate colleagues and by doing research that I not only love but that has direct impact in the courses I teach in.
Conference Information
Date: 11 September 2025
Venue: Neville Alexander Auditorium, Mowbray, Cape Town

REGISTRATION OPEN! CLOSING DATE 29 AUGUST
CALLS FOR ABSTRACTS OPEN! CLOSING DATE 15 JULY
NOTIFICATION OF ACCEPTANCE: 22 AUGUST
- For any queries on Abstract Submissions, contact Gaironeesa Hendricks on g.hendricks@uct.ac.za
Programme will be available mid-August
Contact Us
The Department of Health Sciences Education
Registration OPEN (CLOSES 29 AUGUST)
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS NOW OPEN (CLOSING 16 JULY)
- Date of Notification of Abstract submission outcomes: TBA
- For any queries on Abstract Submissions, contact Gaironeesa Hendricks on g.hendricks@uct.ac.za