Title: Preceptor Orientation Program
1Preceptor Orientation Program
- Developed by the
- Kirksville College of
- Osteopathic Medicine
- for
- health professions preceptors
- and staff members
2THANK YOU for your interest in our preceptor
training program!
- KCOM appreciates all the contributions preceptors
make to the education of tomorrows practitioners.
3Module One
- This is the first module in a 3-part preceptor
orientation program which provides information to
help you, your staff, and the student - Get off to a good start,
- Effectively manage common teaching and learning
tasks, and - Collaborate to improve the feedback and
evaluation process.
4FYI
- With the program file saved to your computer and
in Power Point slide show view, slides 7-18
may advance on their own. - Red print on a slide means theres something for
you to think about or do. - To download forms shown in this program,
- go to the Preceptor Orientation Module page,
right click your mouse, and choose save target
as. - Windows will then ask you to choose a folder to
save the file in (remember where you put it!) - You will then be able to store the forms and
print them as MS Word files.
5The deep breath before you jump into
the water . . . .
- Whether its formally written or has simply been
accumulated through living, each of us has a
personal philosophy of teaching that guides our
interactions with students. - Examination of that internal guidance system can
help us significantly enhance our efficiency and
effectiveness as teachers.
6On the following 12 slides
- are some trigger phrases to stimulate and
guide your reflections in preparation for this
first module of the preceptor orientation
program. Please take a moment to view these
phrases and reflect on your experiences and ideas
about precepting. (The slides
are programmed to show for
6 seconds each.)
7- As a student, my worst experience with a
preceptor was when . . . .
8The best preceptor I ever had . . . .
9Many Preceptors need training on/about . . . .
10If a colleague asked how to get ready for his
or her first student, I would tell them . . .
.
11- To make the most
- of my teaching time,
- I hope students will . . . .
12To get the most out of a rotation, students
should . . . .
13The staff in my office think students should . .
. .
14The worst student I ever had . . . .
15- The most difficult thing about being a preceptor
is . . . .
16To help me as a teacher, the school should . . . .
17To enhance my office as a training site, the
school could provide . . . .
18The most rewarding things about being a
preceptor are . . . .
19Warming up for the race
- Your reflections on the preceding slides should
have helped focus your thoughts on the
teaching-learning interaction. One further
preparatory concept is - How do you make what you know
more available
to you (and your
students)?
20The Reflective Practitioner
- Physicians constantly reflect-in-action, but
seldom reflect on and articulate their
reflection-in-action. - Until practitioners learn to deconstruct and
articulate their intuitive actions, students must
guess at much of what appears to be the art of
medicine. - As practitioners become more fluent about their
intuitive skills, they can teach and mentor
students in a more deliberate, effective, and
efficient manner.
21Reflective practice
- Is a complex and deliberative process of thinking
about and interpreting experience (negative or
positive), in order to learn from it. - Is commonly used by professionals as they meet
new and different situations and
challenges. - Results in a changed perceptual perspective.
- Can enhance practice standards by
avoiding situations that were poorly
managed in the past.
22Keys to reflective practice
- Nurture mindfulness (attending to the ordinary,
the obvious, and the present). - (Be aware of barriers to mindfulness
fatigue, dogmatism, focus on doing (not being),
unexamined negative emotions, failure of
imagination, and literal-mindedness.) - Use reflection or metaprocessing (thinking about
thinking or feeling) in a nonjudgmental way to
become increasingly aware of the tacit knowledge
and skills you use daily (and the biases you
hold).
23- Some questions to guide meta-processing
- What skills and knowledge did I use in this
interaction? How can I describe them clearly? - Did I hear all the patient had to say?
- Is there a relationship between what I did and
how the patient responded? If so, what? - What are my blind spots or biases about this
patient? This family? This diagnosis? - Recognize the goals and outcomes of mindfulness
and reflection - goals -- clarity and learning from the tasks at
hand - outcomes -- enhanced knowledge of processes used,
and ability to communicate that knowledge.
24Preceptor Orientation Program Overview
Initial conference with preceptor
Teaching
Adult
Master Plan for student training
Methods
Learning
Theory
Time and Work Savers
The first day(s)
Facilitating
Getting
the
Started
Learning
Questions
Process
Feedback and Evaluation
Demonstrations
Contributors to
Stages of the
Evaluation
Evaluation Process
Sources of Information
for Evaluation
25To help focus, place yourself in the following
situation
- You are serving as a preceptor for a 3rd year
student who is completing a 4-week primary care
rotation. The student approaches you in the
middle of the second week of the rotation to make
an appointment for an evaluation conference at
the end of the clerkship. - Here in MODULE ONE of this program, we will look
at things you, your staff, and the student could
have already done to prepare to meet the
students request.
26Introduction to section content
- In this section of the module, we will look at
ways to get started in a manner that will help
you and the student have the most positive and
productive experience possible. - These suggestions will also help you avoid or
successfully manage problems that occasionally
arise in a training situation.
27Getting Started
28Ready! Set! GO!!!
- Ready Clarifying roles and responsibilities
- School roles and responsibilities
- Preceptor roles and responsibilities
- Student roles and responsibilities
- Set Establishing rotation objectives
- School objectives
- Preceptor site objectives
- Student objectives
- GO Planning and coordinating the students
first day in your practice
29READYClarifying Roles and Responsibilities
- School Role and Responsibilities
- Preceptor Role and Responsibilities
- Student Role and Responsibilities
30School Role and Responsibilities
- Role Education program designer
- Provide students with stage-appropriate basic and
clinical science education and training - Provide preceptors with course objectives,
student profiles, evaluation guidelines and
materials - Provide formal training opportunities to
interested preceptors - Provide Continuing Medical Education (CME) credit
for preceptors.
31Preceptor Role and Responsibilities
- Role Teacher/Mentor/Role Model
- As appropriate for their educational stage, help
students begin to integrate theory and basic
skills - Provide increasingly independent skills practice
opportunities as the student demonstrates
readiness and competence - Encourage the student to work with and learn from
others including other health care providers,
office support staff, patients, and community
agencies - Give feedback and evaluate student on the above
skills.
32Student Role and Responsibilities
- Role Student practitioner
- Perform clinical skills under supervision with
increasing competency and individual
responsibility - Demonstrate professional behaviors including
motivation, integrity and accurate
self-assessment - Utilize available resources for preceptor- and
self-directed learning, i.e. staff, electronic
tools, computer, books, and journals - Participate fully and enthusiastically in office,
hospital, and community activities
33SETEstablishing Rotation Objectives
- School objectives
- Preceptor site objectives
- Student objectives
34School Goals and Objectives
- KCOM learning objectives encompass the knowledge,
skills, and attitudes required for successful
performance as an entry-level intern or first
year resident. (Print copies are available upon
request.) - Select the school objectives which you and your
staff believe you can most appropriately and
effectively teach during the students rotation.
Summarize them in PART A of the Master Plan for
Student Training Form. (See form and sample on
slides 36 and 37. Forms may be downloaded from
Preceptor Orientation Module Page.)
35Preceptor Site Goals and Objectives
- Every office has special staff or equipment
resources, unusual patient populations, or
practice procedures that the student would
benefit from learning about. - Work with your staff to decide which resources or
unique practice features youd particularly like
to highlight with students. - Summarize the 3 or 4 most important on the PART B
of the Master Plan for Student Training Form.
(See form on slide 36) - Make copies of this form (like slide 37) and
keep on file for future students.
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38Student Learning Objectives
- KCOM Student Information Forms
- Biographical data will come from the school in a
variety of forms a biographical data form,
skills self-assessment, or resume/curriculum
vita. (Forms can be downloaded from the Preceptor
Orientation Module page for gathering
biographical and professional histories.) - Most forms ask the student what he/she hopes to
accomplish on the rotation. (See sample
questions, sample student responses, and sample
2nd year student skills self-assessment
next 3 pages)
39Ambulatory Care Student Self-Assessment (Key
items from questionnaire)
- Students can respond to the questions below
prior to meeting with the preceptor. This
information will be helpful through the initial
goal-setting meetings. - List the clinical rotations you have taken that
have included an outpatient service. - What do you specifically hope to accomplish by
the end of this rotation? - In addition to the basic curriculum, what types
of patients would you like to see or what areas
of medicine would you like to emphasize?
- What interviewing or physical examination skills
would like to develop or improve? - What educational resources do you use most often
to answer clinical questions? - Describe your ideal format for supervision and
teaching during this rotation. - What are your long-term goals?
- What other information should I/we know about
you? -
- Adapted from the work of Lesky, L.G. and
Hershman, W.Y. Practical Approaches to Major
Educational Challenge Archives of Internal
Medicine 1995897-904
40Ambulatory Care Student Self-Assessment (Sample
student responses)
- List the clinical rotations you have taken that
have included an outpatient service. - I have observed approximately 20 surgeries
including orthopedics and general surgery. I have
also shadowed medical and radiation oncologists,
a thoracic surgeon, a general surgeon and a
pediatricion. - I volunteered for 3 months in a pediatric war in
which I assisted doctors, nurses and patients.
- What do you specifically hope to accomplish by
the end of this rotation? - By the completion of the preceptorship, I hope
to be competent in basic history taking and
physical exam skills and have a quality
introduction to some more advanced practice
techniques. I am interested in a well-balanced
introduction to everyday clinical medicine and I
wish to get plenty of hands-on experience.
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42Just before the student arrives . . . .
- Prior to the students arrival, review the Master
Plan for Student Training Form with your summary
of achievable school objectives and site-specific
objectives. - Review the students biographical data,
self-assessments, and written goals (and/or
determine what information forms you want the
student to complete when he/she arrives).
43GOThe students first day in your practice
- Orientation activities by staff
- Initial conference with preceptor on their first
day in the office
44Student Orientation
- Discuss with your staff the Ground Rules and
Expectations Form (slide 45). (Download from
Preceptor Orientation Module page.) - Add, delete, adapt, and edit items as needed.
- Determine which items should be handled by whom.
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46Initial preceptor-student conference
- VERY early in the rotation, discuss with the
student and agree upon specific student
objectives for this rotation. - Enter those into PART C of the Master Training
Form. - Display the completed Master Training Form (see
sample, slide 47) in a location where you, the
student, and the staff can refer to them easily
and check off objectives as they are completed.
(This will be a very helpful reference when its
time for mid-rotation and final feedback and
evaluation.)
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48Many thanks and much recognition to
- Terri Spear, Michelle Mollick, and Lori Schuerman
who conceived, articulated, and pilot-tested
KCOMs site-based training program -
- KCOM administrators, Dixie Rawlins, D.O., Mike
Kuchera, D.O., Barry Robbins, D.O., who have
strongly supported the idea of training resources
for community-based preceptors. - Â
- Linda Heun, Ph.D., Julie Lochbaum, Ph.D., and
Jeanne Kangas, Steve McKernan, D.O., Nancy
Miller, and Michelle Mollick, for serving as
original audiences before we took the revised
materials on the road. - Phyllis Blondefield,Ph.D. David Patterson Julia
McNabb, D.O. and Stephen Laird, D.O. for
assistance with development and review of these
materials.
49References
- Epstein, R. M., (1999) Mindful Practice. JAMA,
Vol. 282, No. 9, pp. 833-839. - Lesky, L.G. and Hershman, W.Y. Practical
Approaches to Major Educational Challenge
Archives of Internal Medicine 95897-904. - Society of Teachers of Family Medicine, Preceptor
Education Project Instructors Manual. Kansas
City, Missouri. - Schön, Donald, The Reflective Practitioner How
Professionals Think in Action.
50- Development of this module was supported by
KCOMs Faculty Development in Family Medicine
grant from DHHS, HRSA, Bureau of Health
Professions, Grant Number 5D45HP50086-06.