Title: Working with the Difficult Clinical Learner
1Working with the Difficult Clinical Learner
- Luke H. Mortensen, PhD, FAHA
- Des Moines University
2Why Do You Teach ?
- It is possible to store the mind with a million
facts and still be entirely uneducated. - -Alec Bourne
- Education is the ability to listen to almost
anything without losing your temper. - -Robert Frost
- The whole art of teaching is in awakening the
natural curiosity of a young mind. - -Anatole France
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5Whats Available at DMU?
- Cutting-edge technology
- METI and Laerdal Human Patient Simulators
- Reevaluation of students and clerkship clinical
faculty - Computer-savvy students and faculty
- Integration of technology into all courses
- Medical Informatics Infrastructure
- Useful, appropriate and effective communication
(electronic and direct) between central campus
and all rotation sites
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9Medical Informatics
- Introduction to the DMU Portal, e-Library and PDA
Resources - Access to the DMU Faculty Development Web-site
- Locating and Accessing Full Journal Articles at
the DMU e-Library - Evidence-Based Practice Resources
- Pub-Med Searching
- Drug Resources
- Disease Resources/References and Full Texts
- PDA Texts, References (ePocrates, etc.),
Calculators and Quick Decision e-Books - Differential Diagnosis Tools
- Patient Education Resources
10DMU Faculty Development Website
www.dmu.edu
11Faculty Development at DMU
- What is Available (publicly available, structured
modules, podcasts, RSS feeds, videos, etc.) - Evaluation of Learners
- The Art of Conversation and Conflict Management
- Leadership and Negotiation Skills in the Clinical
Setting - Career Goals/Management for Medical School
Faculty - Understanding a Competency-Based Curriculum
- Assessing and Evaluating Competency
- Academic Medicine and Medical Education Research
- Technology and Teaching Effectiveness
- Cultural Competency in the Clinical Setting
- Teaching Medical Students Effectively/Providing
Feedback - Working with the Difficult Medical Student
12The One Minute PreceptorTime-Efficient
Teaching in a Busy Clinical Practice
- Teaching the 5-Microskills
13The One Minute Preceptor
10 Minutes of Teaching Time
- The average teaching encounter takes 10 min
- 6 min for the learner to present the case
- 3 min for the preceptor to ask questions and
clarify information - 1 min of discussion and teaching time
- One Minute Preceptor model may take more than a
minute but provides a structure to help maximize
the teaching time of the encounter
3 Minutes
Questioning
1 Minute
Discussion
Presentation
6 Minutes
14The 5-Step Microskills Method
- The One Minute Preceptor strategy is based on
five steps that build upon each other - Get a Commitment
- Probe for Supporting Evidence
- Reinforce What Was Done Well
- Give Guidance About Errors or Omissions
- Teach a General Principle
15Step 1 Get a Commitment
- What do you think is going on?
- What do think the plan should be?
- How should this case be followed up?
- Why?
- It invests the learner further into the case
- Encourages learner to process beyond their
current comfort level and problem solve - Allows you to assess their problem-solving skills
16Step 2 Probe for Supporting Evidence
- Explore the basis of the learners opinion and
what they have committed to in Step 1 - What factors support your diagnosis?
- Why did you choose that treatment?
- Why?
- Was it a lucky guess or was it a well-reasoned
and logical answer? - Helps you to assess the learners
- knowledge base
- thinking process
- clinical reasoning skills
17Step 3 Reinforce What Was Done Well
- Skills and positive behaviors need repeated
reinforcement to become firmly established - Provide the learner some positive feedback
- Increase the likelihood that these behaviors will
be incorporated into future clinical encounters - Describe specific behaviors and likely outcomes
- Good job! is too vague
- Example I liked that your differential took
into account the patients age, recent exposures
and symptoms is reinforcing positive feedback
18Step 4 Guide Errors and Omissions
- Correct the learners mistakes avoiding negative
labels such as bad or poor - Learner less likely to feel judged
- Learner more likely to see criticism as
constructive - Describe specifically what was wrong, what the
consequence might be, and how to correct it for
the future - Example During the ear exam the patient seemed
uncomfortable. Lets go over holding the
otoscope.
19Step 5 Teach a General Principle
- An important and challenging task for any learner
is to take new information from one encounter and
generalize it to others - Manifestation of symptoms
- Treatment options
- Available resources and references
- Why? Allows learning to be more easily
transferred to other situations - Example Remember 10-15 people are carriers of
strep, which can lead to false positive strep
tests.
20Conclusion Step
- Wrap up the teaching session with directions to
the learner about what may be necessary to
resolve the case - Why?...
- Time management is critical
- Signals the end of the interaction so that the
learner may move on to the next encounter - Directs remainder of the encounter
- ExampleLets go back in the room and Ill show
you how to get a good throat swab. Tell me when
we have the results, and Ill watch you go over
the treatment plan.
21Example Teacher-Learner Encounter
- The One Minute Preceptor strategy is based on
five steps that build upon each other - Get a Commitment
- Probe for Supporting Evidence
- Reinforce What Was Done Well
- Give Guidance About Errors or Omissions
- Teach a General Principle
22Difficult Learner
- Hard to define
- but you know one when you see one!
- a continuum of struggling ? failing
- deficiencies in one or more areas
- insufficient knowledge
- poor clinical judgment/reasoning skills
- poor communication/interpersonal skills
- professionalism
- inefficient use of time
23Objective Structured Educational Experience
- The OSEE is a simulation of the difficult
learner as a formative experience for clinical
teaching - There exist many useful taxonomies for both the
difficult learner and teaching approaches in
this exercise, we will focus on the interactive
features of the student-preceptor encounter - As such, this isnt about doing teaching wrongly
or rightly, but to help us reflect on what we are
doing as educator-clinicians and teaching efficacy
24The Scenario
- The agenda for today is to start with a volunteer
from the audience who will precept our
difficult learner. - The student
- A fourth-year undergraduate medical student
- Has just had a 15-minute patient encounter
- The volunteer
- Will act as the attending in a clinical
environment in which students or residents are
seeing patients - Will debrief the student-patient encounter
25Observation
- Following the encounter, we will open the
discussion to these areas - The Encounter
- The teaching-learning interaction
- Formative Assessment
- Feedback for the preceptor
- Appreciative Inquiry
- Objective is NOT to correct but to explore
reasons for choices made
26The Teacher-Learner Encounter
27Debriefing the Encounter
- What did we just see?
- Discuss a key point in the interaction that you
felt was remarkable. - How would you characterize the learner?
- How would you describe the teacher?
- How did the preceptor teach this learner?
28Debriefing the Encounter
- Did the preceptor fall into the learners trap by
providing answers to all questions asked? - Did the preceptor placate the learner?
- What kind of teacher does this learner need?
- What do you think the student learned?
- What does this learner need from this teacher?
- How much time did they take?
- How much time do they need?
29Formative Assessment
- Debriefing the faculty member
- Feedback for the teacher
- DMU resources available for clinical educators
- Appreciative Inquiry
- What was this encounter like for the preceptor?
- Why did they make the choices they made?
- Would they change anything?
- What would follow-up with this learner include?
- What were your expectations?
- How do you formally evaluate this learner?
- How is the learner remediated?
30Bibliography
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Michael S. Hoffman, Jerome R. Usatine, Richard
Academic Medicine, Vol 81(4), Apr 2006. pp.
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Bowen, Judith L. Eckstrom, Elizabeth Muller,
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31Remediation References
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or unacceptable mark in any category. Students
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