Preceptors


In pharmacy, a preceptor is a practicing pharmacist who gives personal instruction, training, supervision, and/or mentorship to pharmacy students in a practice setting. Preceptors are the heart of our pharmacy program. Their contributions advance the industry and ensure students become professionals.

Our students will complete 40 weeks of rotations and student experiential education during the course of their degrees, all of which are supervised and made possible by preceptors. The success of our programs is due to our preceptors' dedication. They create patient care opportunities, guide students, and assess their performance.

Our preceptors work in a wide variety of environments.

The faculty fosters high quality experiential education by recruiting, retaining and supporting exemplary preceptors in diverse practice settings throughout the province in order to provide students with optimal learning opportunities and graduate pharmacists capable of meeting the needs of society. These committed professionals work throughout the industry, including:

  • Institutions
  • Community pharmacies
  • Hospital pharmacies
  • Ambulatory clinics (including Primary Care Networks or Family Care Clinics)
  • Specialty sites (including locations outside of Alberta)

Many preceptors are in clinical practice settings providing direct patient care. With the implementation of the PharmD program, opportunities for students with preceptors in non-patient care settings, such as drug information, and research and leadership/management are also being developed.

Why Precept?

Precepting a student provides an opportunity to nurture and promote our profession, develop personally, and influence the maturation and education of our future colleagues.

Think back to your experience as a student; preceptors and mentors play a significant role in the professional development of students.

Become a Preceptor Today

What our Preceptors are Saying

"Learning is ongoing. My students learn from me and I learn from them. It is a wonderful opportunity from which preceptor and students benefit from. It is a symbiotic relationship."

"I find it very rewarding to help students develop skills and reach their potential in their future pharmacy career."

"I believe that hands-on learning under the guidance of a preceptor is a valuable aspect in a pharmacy student's education. The student can receive support and advice that would be difficult for books and classroom material to duplicate."