Document Type : Original Article
Authors
1
PhD Student in Educational Management, Department of Educational Sciences, Zanjan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Zanjan, Iran
2
Associate Professor, Department of Educational Sciences, Zanjan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Zanjan, Iran
3
Assistant Professor in the Department of Educational Administration, Farhangian University, P.O. Box 14665-889,Tehran, Iran.
10.22034/jiera.2026.577700.3471
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to design an integrated model of the conditions, processes, and outcomes of educational quality in universities of medical sciences.
Method: This applied, descriptive, and qualitative study was conducted using the grounded theory approach based on the Strauss and Corbin (1990) model. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 21 experts. Purposeful sampling was employed and continued until theoretical saturation was achieved. Data analysis was carried out in three stages: open, axial, and selective coding. To ensure the trustworthiness of the findings, credibility, transferability, confirmability, and dependability criteria were applied. The reliability of the coding process was confirmed using Cohen’s kappa coefficient (0.808).
Results: The findings indicated that educational quality is a multidimensional, dynamic, and systemic phenomenon shaped through continuous interaction among conditions, strategies, and outcomes. In total, 90 initial concepts were extracted and organized into 30 major categories and 10 core categories, including curriculum quality, comprehensive educational services, faculty competencies, educational evaluation, clinical learning, educational governance, digital education, internal evaluation, educational ethics and justice, and educational data intelligence. These categories were integrated into a comprehensive model entitled the “Integrated Educational Quality System,” encompassing five main dimensions: causal conditions, contextual conditions, intervening conditions, interactive strategies, and consequences.
Conclusions: Achieving educational quality in universities of medical sciences requires adopting an integrated and systematic approach that simultaneously addresses structural, managerial, procedural, value-based, and outcome-oriented dimensions. The proposed model provides a context-based and evidence-informed framework for policymaking, performance improvement, enhancement of clinical learning, and strengthening social accountability.
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