becoming a great clinical teacher
Post on 17-Jun-2015
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Becoming a Great Clinical Becoming a Great Clinical TeacherTeacher
Becoming a great CI means we must become great at assessing our students and helping them to
progress. While clinical education is not an
evaluative process we use the tool of evaluation to help our students
progress to entry-level clinicians.
Types of EvaluationTypes of Evaluation
Formative– Feedback given to students during the course of
a clinical internship– Primary purposes
To provide feedback during practice To determine how students are changing To identify additional work needed for mastery
Types of EvaluationTypes of Evaluation
Summative– Feedback given to students during at the end of
a clinical internship– Primary purposes
To evaluate overall effectiveness of a clinical course To determine whether a student is competent in a
procedure To evaluate the final achievement of objectives To gather data for determining grades
Types of EvaluationTypes of Evaluation
Formative Summative
PURPOSE Process Outcome
USE Provides learning Grading
TIMING During At the end
AUDIENCE Internal External
FUNCTION Predicts Sets standards summative for formative
Evaluation-When do I begin?Evaluation-When do I begin?
Evaluation should begin as soon as the student starts
It should be ongoing and continuousIt should reflect what the outcome will be –
no surprises at the end of the internship
Feedback is keyFeedback is keyProviding students with
formative evaluation- FEEDBACK -during the course of the clinical internship is key to achieving the primary purposes.
What is good feedback?What is good feedback?
Specific vs. Global– “You need to keep your patients on track
during your interview.” vs. “Your interview was terrible.”
Positive vs. Negative– “Your hands are close to correct for that
mobilization, but you will have better results if…” vs. “Your hands are not in the correct place.”
What is good feedback?What is good feedback?
Useful vs. Directed at something that cannot be changed– “Let’s problem solve how you are going to do that
technique because you seem to have difficulty.” vs. “You can’t do that technique because your hands are too small.”
Supportive vs. judgmental– “Well, 2 hours is rather long to do an eval.” vs. “I have
never had a student who took 2 hours to do an eval.”
What is good feedback?What is good feedback?
Given in private vs. in front of others– This is generally true although having a
discussion like that described in the book on page 275 (Thad) might be very effective and appropriate.
Based on first hand information vs. based on hearsay or conjecture– Whenever possible feedback should be based
on what you have observed.
What is good feedback?What is good feedback?
Fair vs. based on only one incident– Safety is an exception to this. However, in
general you should based on several observations.
Honest vs. Obscured by attempts to protect feelings– This person is going to be your colleague, you
need to tell them if they are not meeting the competencies.
What is good feedback?What is good feedback?
Constructive vs. Given without suggestions for improvement– “When you get Mr. Smith out of bed you
should support his right leg.” vs. “You used an inappropriate technique for getting Mr. Smith out of bed.”
– Feedback is all about change
What is good feedback?What is good feedback?
Current and timely vs. Delayed by several days or weeks– It is tricky to find the time, but you should let
your student know how they are doing on a regular basis.
– This is especially important with first rotation students and early in any internship.
What is good feedback?What is good feedback?
Focused on behavior vs. Focused on personality traits– “When you enter a patients room it is important
to smile and greet them.” vs. “ You are too abrupt when you begin your treatments.”
Checked for clarity vs. Improperly understood– Always ask your student to repeat what you
said so you will know that they have heard what it is you want them to hear and change.
If your student is not If your student is not progressing based on the progressing based on the
feedback… feedback…
Contact the school. It is never too soon.
Being a good listenerBeing a good listener
What make someone a good listener?
Active listeningActive listeningThe skill of becoming involved with what
the other person is saying.
Ability to attend so closely to what the other person is saying, that his/her response generates your next question.
Active listening, cont.Active listening, cont.The ability to wait patiently for a thoughtful
response.
Ability to attend to the emotional status of
the speaker.
Ability to create an atmosphere in which the
other person feels his/her contributions are
valuable.
Special Communication SkillsSpecial Communication Skills
Maintain an environment for Maintain an environment for open discussionopen discussion
Consider the physical environment in which you are going to discuss concerns.
Consider your body language and how it may impact the discussion.
Encourage questions and suggestions from the student.
Use cooling off periods if the discussion gets too heated.
Manage defensivenessManage defensiveness
Be aware sensitive areas (both your student’s and your own)
Keep limits and non-negotiables in mind –write them down if necessary.
Focus on the behavior and the professional requirements.
Have a third party present, either someone else at your facility or the ACCE.
Practice what you are going to say.
Promote collegiality through Promote collegiality through disclosure and sharing disclosure and sharing
responsibilityresponsibilityWork together to establish goals and
decisions.Sharing your own struggles or challenges
can encourage student sharing.This doesn’t prevent you from maintaining
clear roles. You are the clinical instructor and are responsible to assure they meet the professional competencies.
Guidelines for Summative Guidelines for Summative EvaluationEvaluation
Assessments should be based on definite observations– If you haven’t observed the student doing
something write “not observed”Assessment should be based on typical and
frequent performance– If you have only observed a student doing
something once can you be sure they will do the same thing again?
Guidelines for Summative Guidelines for Summative EvaluationEvaluation
Do not “average” performance– Assessment should be based on what the
student is doing today.– We know students start at the novice level and
progress to entry-level. If we average their performance they will never meet the entry-level competency.
Guidelines for Summative Guidelines for Summative EvaluationEvaluation
Know the tool you will be using to assess your student.– If you are unsure how to use the tool after
reading the instructions- ask.
Use explanatory remarks.– ACCEs love to see lots of comments and more
importantly students need that type of feedback.
In summary…In summary…
Students need feedback to know how they are doing and what they need to change
If the student is not making progress, contact the school ASAP.
Formative evaluation should predict summative evaluation – NO surprises!
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