Resident as teacher: Educating the educators
Autor: | Jennifer L Koestler, Matthew A Weissman, Lisa Bensinger |
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Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Faculty Medical Students Medical media_common.quotation_subject education New York Context (language use) Pilot Projects Education Presentation Teaching development Role model Pedagogy ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION Team leader Humans Learning Program Development Physician's Role media_common Medical education Education theory Debriefing Teaching Clinical Clerkship Internship and Residency Preceptor General Medicine New York City Curriculum Psychology Education Medical Undergraduate |
Zdroj: | Medical education. 40(11) |
ISSN: | 0308-0110 |
Popis: | Context and setting Residents teach students informally, by asking and answering questions, giving mini-lectures, and providing clinically relevant, on-time teaching, whereas attending doctors often have scheduled and more structured time with students as assigned preceptors or teaching attendings. Why the idea was necessary Due to the time demands and economic pressures of contemporary medical practice, talented and dedicated teaching faculty staff are becoming more difficult to find. Residents are often called upon to teach in their stead and, although they are eager to teach, the literature argues that residents need training in teaching skills if they are to be most effective. What was done We created a 1-month elective at our institution that offers senior residents the opportunity to learn about educational theory and practise teaching while free of the constraints imposed by the role of ward team leader. This elective focuses on additional skills (e.g. adult learning theory and feedback) not addressed in depth in the required Resident Teaching Development Programme (RTDP) offered to residents in all core clinical departments at our hospital. We piloted this elective with a chief resident (MAW) in the internal medicine and paediatrics residency, who served as a clinical preceptor for Year 3 medical students during the paediatric clerkship, reviewing student case presentations, discussing relevant topics and teaching physical diagnosis at the bedside. During the pilot, the teaching resident met bi-weekly with a faculty mentor to discuss required readings and debrief on individual teaching sessions. Each teaching encounter was also supervised by an experienced teacher who provided immediate feedback to the resident. Unlike teaching on the wards, where time is a constant pressure, as a clinical preceptor the resident has more time to focus on teaching the communication and physical examination skills needed to be an effective clinician (as the presentation of 1 patient may last as long as 90 minutes). Evaluation of results and impact The teaching resident felt that the experience was a useful way to consolidate and practise the teaching skills addressed during the RTDP. It also allowed the resident to focus on the most crucial teaching points and interesting aspects of a case rather than on the minutiae involved in managing an acutely ill patient. Student evaluations of the experience were positive. Both students and mentor commented that the teaching resident was a strong teacher and role model. One student noted that the resident ... showed [them] just how big a role a [Year 3 student] can have on a team ... [the teaching resident] was a model for the type of resident I want to be . Another student described the teaching resident as a strong teacher who was very thorough and detailed . His faculty mentor described the resident as an outstanding preceptor to whom the students eagerly responded . As this elective is offered to more residents this year, we plan to assess the improvement in residents’ teaching skills using evaluations from students, preceptors and mentors before and after the course to better quantify the impact of this teaching initiative. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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