The Medical Education Partnership Initiative (MEPI) was a large-scale, US government investment in strengthening the health workforce in Africa by providing medical schools with funding to implement activities based on local needs and priorities. Schools that were awarded the grant chose to invest in strengthening community-based education (CBE) and formed a technical working group convened by the Coordinating Centre of MEPI (a partnership of institutions also funded by the MEPI grant). The technical working group collaborated with CapacityPlus (a US Agency for International Development (USAID)-supported programme with funding specifically allocated to work with the MEPI schools) to strengthen their CBE programmes.[1] Within this context, the University of Zimbabwe College of Health Sciences (UZCHS) requested a peer review of its CBE programme. The evaluation served as a learning exercise for both UZCHS and other medical schools in the MEPI network in applying the peer-review process while evaluating the UZCHS CBE programme.CBE is increasingly included as part of health sciences curricula across the globe. It forms part of an educational strategy to address the worldwide inequities in human resources for health by preparing graduates for service to rural and under-served populations.[2] The protocol developed by the Collaboration for Health Equity through Education and Research (CHEER) was adapted for use by UZCHS to evaluate its CBE programme. CHEER was formed in South Africa (SA) during 2003 to examine strategies that would increase the likelihood of health professional graduates choosing to practise in rural and under-served areas. [3,4] Since then, the CHEER model has demonstrated effectiveness in examining complex outcomes in medical education in countries other than SA, as reported by S Reid on the University of Cape Town's Primary Health Care Directorate website (www. primaryhealthcare.uct.ac.za/).The medical school in Harare, Zimbabwe was established in 1963 and runs a 5-year undergraduate medical programme (MB ChB). The uniBackground. The University of Zimbabwe College of Health Sciences (UZCHS), Harare, which has a long tradition of community-based education (CBE), has not been evaluated since 1991. An innovative approach was used to evaluate the programme during 2015. Objectives. To evaluate the CBE programme, using a peer-review model of evaluation and simultaneously introducing and orientating participating colleagues from other medical schools in southern Africa to this review process.Methods. An international team of medical educators, convened through the Medical Education Partnership Initiative, worked collaboratively to modify an existing peer-review assessment method. Data collection took the form of pre-visit surveys, on-site and field-visit interviews with key informants, a review of supporting documentation and a post-review visit. Results. All 5 years of the medical education curriculum at UZCHS included some form of CBE that ranged from community exposure in the 1st year to district hospi...