The call for proposals for the
First International Conference on Faculty Development
in the Health Professions defined faculty development as ‘that broad range of activities that institutions use to renew or assist faculty in their roles’ [
3]. It also re-affirmed the importance of using these activities to ‘assist faculty in their roles as teachers, educators, administrators, leaders and/or researchers’ [
4]. Although this may be one of the more comprehensive definitions of faculty development to date, conference deliberations highlighted the diversity of terms used to describe this aspect of professional development as well as the fact that some languages have no equivalent. At the same time, the meaning of faculty development across cultures was revealing. For example, the Dutch term,
docentprofessionalisering, loosely translates as the professionalization of teaching. This emphasis on professionalization, of both teachers and teaching, is intriguing and clearly aligns with a current focus on standards for teaching [
5,
6]. The term is limited, however, in its emphasis on teaching (at the exclusion of other important faculty roles and tasks). In some ways, the French term,
formation professorale, is more inclusive, as it is not restricted to teaching and refers to the ‘formation’ of the professorial role; the German term,
Personal-
und Organisationsentwicklung, is also of interest, as it emphasizes both individual and organizational development, another critical component of faculty development. Irrespective of the nomenclature, however, faculty development should encompass the skills relevant to the individual’s institutional and faculty position, and help to sustain their vitality, both now and in the future [
7]. We should also consider Webster-Wright’s shift [
8] from professional development to ‘continual professional learning’, which in many ways describes the ultimate goal of faculty development, as long as we remember that the word
faculty is meant to be inclusive, referring to all individuals who are involved in the teaching and supervision of students in the health professions, at all levels of the continuum, in a wide range of contexts (e.g., in the classroom, at the bedside, in the outpatient clinic) and settings (e.g., the university, the hospital and the community).