Title: Teaching Residents to... Teach
1Teaching Residents to... Teach
Peter DeBlieux,MD LSUHSC Clinical Professor of
Medicine LSUIH Emergency Department
Director Emergency Medicine Director of Resident
and Faculty Development
2Objectives
- At the end of this presentation participants will
be able to - Demonstrate principles of Adult Learning
- Perform a One Minute Preceptor
- Reflect on their own teaching practices
3Great Teachers are... Made not BornExample is
not the main thing in influencing others. It is
the only thing.- Albert Schweitzer
4Majority of Academic Physicians are Accidental
EducatorsDid you actually plan on a life of
teaching?
5 6Medical Education
- Learning the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and
behaviors that promote the development of a
physician.
7The Golden Rule of Medical Education...
- Treat learners as you would like them to treat
patients. As if that patient was you!
8The Purpose of Education is to Make Yourself
Obsolete as a Teacher
9Continuum of Medical Education/Competence
Continuum
10Faculty Supervision
Patient Care Responsibility
Expert
Novice
11Patient Caring and Learning
- Patient
- Facilitator Learner
12Establishing Ground Rules
- Creates a safe learning environment
- No put downs verbal or non-verbal, no matter how
tempting - Speak for yourself
- Everyone is responsible for their own learning
- Expect unfinished business, too many exercises,
not enough time
13Why Should Doctors Teach?
- Enhancement of their own knowledge base and
problem solving skills - Development of learning habits and skills
enabling lifelong maintenance of professional
competence - Creation of and fostering a TEAM mentality
14Why Should Doctors Teach?
- Fosters goodwill among house-staff
- Self satisfaction of teaching
- Availability of residents you are doing it
anyway, near peer phenomenon, role modeling
15Barriers to Teaching
- Time
- Training
- Service vs Education
16Structure of Adult Learning
Problem Solving Concepts Concepts Principles
Principles Principles Facts Facts Facts
Facts Facts
17Principles of Adult Learning
- Motivation is established, the material is useful
- Assurance that learning is active
- Concepts not facts are taught
- Feedback is provided promptly
18Principles of Adult Learning
- Environment is non-threatening
- Material is related to existing knowledge
- Learners are treated as individuals
- Learning is best when self-paced
19Bedside Teaching
- Medicine is learned at the bedside and not in the
classroom the best teaching is that taught by
the patient himself.- - Sir William Osler
20Attributes of Effective Teachers
- Enthusiasm for the mission
- Incorporates student in the learning process
- Problem solving emphasis
- Student-centered instruction
- Humanistic Orientation
21Attributes of Effective Teachers
- Organization/clarity
- Knowledge
- Group instructional skills
- Clinical supervision
- Clinical competence
- Modeling professional characteristics
22Techniques for Successful Bedside Instruction
- Clear planning and preparation
- Effective leadership
- Total and constructive participation
23Delivering Feedback
24Performance Model
25Evaluations
- Summative
- Judgement
- After the fact
- Formative
- Change in behavior
- Ongoing
26Ideal Behaviors for Delivering Feedback
- Eye contact
- Enthusiasm
- Ask and encourage questions
27Ideal Behaviors for Delivering Feedback
- Clinical supervision
- Clinical competence
- Modeling professional characteristics
28Ideal Behaviors for Effective Feedback
- Interested in the learner
- Honest
- Well defined goals
29Ideal Behaviors for Effective Feedback
- Clear explanations
- Problem solving emphasis
- Student centered instruction
30Ideal Behaviors for Effective Feedback
- Timely fashion
- Focused on behaviors
- Limited in volume
31Ideal Behaviors for Effective Feedback
- Safe environment chosen
- Focused on patient caring
- Allows learner self assessment
32Ideal Behaviors for Effective Feedback
- Use of open ended questions
- Offers recommendations for improvement
- Summarizes for closure
33Barriers to Effective Feedback
- Requires role models
- Emotional investment
- Observable behaviors
- Time
34Pearls for Effective Feedback
- Praise in public.Perfect in private
- Ego sandwich- first praise for appropriate
responses then- identify performance challenges
and correct lastly-- finish with encouragement
for participation - Ask learner to summarize take home messages
35One Minute PreceptorTeaching on the Go!
- Get a commitment
- Probe for supporting evidence
- Teach general rules
- Reinforce what is done correctly
- Correct mistakes
- Reinforce what is done correctly
36One Minute PreceptorTeaching on the Go!
- Get a commitment
- A 3 year old with ear pain- do you think this OM?
- Probe for supporting evidence
- What leads you to make this diagnosis?
- Teach general rules
- Reinforce what is done correctly
- Correct mistakes
- Reinforce what is done correctly
37One Minute PreceptorTeaching on the Go!
- Get a commitment
- Probe for supporting evidence
- Teach general rules
- The majority of OM cases are not caused by
bacteria - Reinforce what is done correctly
- I like the way that you made the child feel safe
and comfortable during your exam - Correct mistakes
- Reinforce what is done correctly
38One Minute PreceptorTeaching on the Go!
- Get a commitment
- Probe for supporting evidence
- Teach general rules
- Reinforce what is done correctly
- Correct mistakes
- I think you should spend more time teaching the
mother about the risk-benefit of antibiotics in
OM - Reinforce what is done correctly
- I think that your search on OM and complications
was a brilliant way to prepare you for ..
39One Minute PreceptorTeaching on the Go!
- Select a partner-one plays the role of the
student/learner, the other the preceptor - Choose one of the following
- URI-viral syndrome
- Asthma
- Vaccinations
- Get a commitment
- Probe for supporting evidence
- Teach general rules
- Reinforce what is done correctly
- Correct mistakes
- Reinforce what is done correctly