Title: Mentoring Matters
1Mentoring Matters
- Marcia Docherty, RTNM, MA
- 2007 SAMRT Fall Conference
2Overview
- Review of the preceptor model
- A preceptor framework
- Precepting techniques
3The Preceptor Model
- Apprenticeship model
- Contributing to the work environment with
learning as a secondary outcome (OMara, 1997,
p.48) - Preceptor model
- Neophyte works alongside an experience
practitioner in a one-to-one relationship - Clinical teaching model
- One clinical instructor teaching 8 to 10 students
in the hospital setting
4The Purpose of Preceptorship
- A variety of reasons exist for including a
practicum in academic programs (Practicum Study
for HPS, 2003, p. 5) - A mandatory, prescribed length of experience for
professional registration - An opportunity to apply and develop classroom
learning or theoretical concepts in work settings - Opportunities to clarify or determine career
directions - Opportunities to identify and utilize the generic
skills they are developing - Opportunities to become work literate, to
establish contacts, and to gain experience in the
workforce
5Preceptor Models
- Orientation Model
- Educational Model
6Orientation Model of Preceptorship
- Used to orientate new hires, particularly in the
field of nursing - Developed in an attempt to improve recruitment,
retention, and job satisfaction (Belcher, 1997,
p. 119) - The preceptor is accountable for thoroughly
evaluating the skill set of the orientee and
socializing them to the workplace - Preceptors are selected and trained for the
position - Both preceptor and orientee are accountable to a
manager
7Educational Model of Preceptorship
- Barnum (1997) defines precepting as a subset in
the instructing relationship that falls between
teaching mentoring - Teaching is about learning content and the
personal relationship is secondary - Mentoring is focused more on individual needs
than content - Precepting requires specific content,
individualized for each student
8Educational Model of Preceptorship
9Challenges of the Educational Model
- Preceptors are automatically expected to function
in this role without additional training or
actual demonstration of aptitude or skill - Placement with preceptors typically made on
availability - Logistical restraints rarely allow for consistent
placement with one preceptor - Preceptors do not work in isolation and require
support from peers and administrators
10Challenges of the Educational Model
- A students disposition to their learning will
affect his/her perceptions of the experience - Student satisfaction with the job does affect
their performance proportionally - Novices cannot be sure that their preceptor is
competent - Gender will influence the students perceptions
of a preceptors abilities - Positive preceptor characteristics far outweigh
site characteristics
11Challenges of the Educational Model
- Lack of linkage between academic staff and
preceptors - Faculty are rarely involved in the practicum
experience - Preceptors are often unaware how he/she fits into
the educational sequence - Practicum curriculum is developed for students
often without input from the preceptors - Preceptors unfamiliar with program curriculum
cannot accept and internalize the programs
values - The effective integration of learning components
results in a cohesive educational process - CMA, 2001
12Roles and Responsibilities of the Preceptor
evaluators
answers questions
teachers
guide
support system
facilitator
role models
mentor
student advocates
subject matter expert
liaisons
coach
supervisor
clinical educator
mediator
demonstrates best practices
experiential expert
13- Working knowledge (the action knowledge used
in the workplace) is qualitatively different from
the knowledge of school - Munby, Versnel, Hutchinson, Chin Berg (2002)
p.1 -
- School knowledge is declarative while workplace
knowledge is procedural
14Requirements of a Preceptor
- Clinically competent
- Willing to share knowledge skills
- Willing to function as a preceptor
- Able to prioritize
- Great time management skills
-
- The art of precepting is knowing when to widen
the experience to ensure student competency and
when to set boundaries on the experience to
reduce the risk of failure
15The Role of the Preceptor
- Cooperating occurs when the preceptor initially
determines with other technologists, faculty, the
student and the program curriculum what learning
needs to occur. - Valuing happens next as the preceptor sets
boundaries on the experience through observation
and listening to the student. - Task-oriented learning focuses on providing the
student with hands-on experience of the job using
a variety of techniques. - Communicating focuses on articulating the roles
and the profession as well as providing time for
reflection.
Öhrling Hallberg, 2001, p. 539
16Precepting Techniques
- Sheltering the Students When Learning
17Cooperating
- Setting learning goals with the student, other
technologists, faculty program curriculum - Conflict management styles
- Complete the questionnaire and score
18Conflict Management Styles
- A - competing
- B - collaborating
- C - compromising
- D - avoiding
- E - accommodating
- The higher your score in a specific area, the
more likely you are to use that conflict
management style.
19Conflict Management Styles
- Each style has a role to play in the workplace,
but the best conflict management approach is
collaboration. - Only collaboration can lead to problem solving
and true conflict resolution. - Consider any patterns that
- may be evident in your score
- and think about how to better
- handle conflict.
20SOAP Approach to Conflict Resolution
- Subjective
- What do you/others think and say?
- Objective
- What are the specific behaviours that are
observed? - Assessment
- Your differential diagnosis of the problem.
- Plan
- Gather more data/intervene/get help
21Valuing
- Setting boundaries on the experience
22Emotional Learning
- Emotional learning anchors knowledge
- If I am activated appropriately, I will be able
to react - If I am overloaded, I will freeze up
- When learning in highly activated states
- Knowledge is recalled when similar states are
invoked - Anchors mastery under stress
- Knowledge tends to be indelible
23- How do we create an environment in which the
student feels simultaneously challenged and
psychologically safe enough to engage in
learning?
24Debriefing
- A means to improve professional effectiveness
with the student - A process that helps students recognize and
resolve pressing clinical and behavioral
situations raised by the experience and the
judgment of the instructor. - The act of reviewing a real or simulated event in
which participants explain, analyze and
synthesize information and emotional states to
improve performance in similar situations.
25Three Stages of Debriefing
- Reactions - Clear the air and set the stage for
discussion feelings - Understanding - Understand what happened and
explore deeper meaning - Summary Review what was learned and ensure the
single scenario is put into a larger context
26Dirty Questions
- Not all questions are created equal!
- Advocacy That was really stupid?
- Inquiry What the were you thinking?
- Cleaning questions is a learned
- skill
27Advocacy-Inquiry Approach
- Advocacy I noticed you had the patient lying
prone on the bed/table? - Inquiry Can you tell me why you chose to do
that?
28Debriefing
- Advocacy Statements use I
- I noticed that you were
- It seemed to me
- I thought our policy was to
- I observed you getting
- Inquiry Statements keep them short
- I am curious to know how you got there?
- I wonder why?
- I wonder what happened?
- I didnt see you wash your hands after that
patient. Did I miss that? - I didnt see you introduce yourself. Why do you
think you didnt?
29Debriefing
- Use good judgment
- People make mistakes
- Assume they meant to do the right thing
- Believe they were prepared, care about doing
their best, want to improve . . . OR . . . - Entertain the 5 chance that there is a
legitimate reason - You have valuable expertise and insight you are
paid to be discriminating
30Example Exercise
- Dirty Question
- Advocacy
- Inquiry
31Precepting Techniques
- Facilitating the Students Learning
32Task-Orientated Learning
- Provide hands-on learning
- Think about the last time you learned something
new. How many of you . . . - prefer doing and experiencing?
- prefer observing and reflecting?
- prefer to learn the underlying concepts and
reasons? - prefers to try things to see if they work?
33Perception Continuum How we think about things
Processing Continuum How we do things
34Learning Styles
- Whats your preferred learning style?
- Complete the questionnaire
- Circle the best response
- Total each column
35VAK Learning Styles
- Visual learning style involves the use of seen or
observed things, including pictures, diagrams,
demonstrations, displays, handouts, films,
flip-charts, etc. - Auditory learning style involves the transfer of
information through listening to the spoken
word, of self or others, of sounds and noises. - Kinesthetic learning involves physical experience
- touching, feeling, holding, doing, practical,
hands-on experiences.
36Learning Styles
- Be inclusive of other learning styles
- Vary your approach
- Experience, watching, thinking, doing
- Visuals, lectures, activities
37The One Minute Preceptor
- Get a commitment
- Probe for supporting evidence
- Reinforce what was done well
- Give guidance about errors and omissions
- Teach a general principle
- Conclusion
- http//www.oucom.ohiou.edu/fd/monographs/microskil
ls.htm
38The One Minute Preceptor
- We have a patient with L-Spine pain/tumours. What
protocol should we follow? - Why do you think this?
- You were right to suggest . . .
- But what about the theory behind . . ?
- When I have patients with L-spine pain/tumours I
consider . . . - Lets get the patients history and make a final
decision on the protocol.
39Communicating
- Reflective Practice
- The discipline of examining the values,
assumptions, and knowledge-base that drives ones
own professional practice - Making sense of the way we actively filter,
create and perceive our environment - Reflective practitioners who learn to scrutinize
their taken-for-granted assumptions and mental
routines are able to self correct and improve
their professional skills (mastery) - The simple act of reviewing the event with the
preceptor helps the student analyze and
synthesize the information
40Communicating
- Values
- The basic notion/conviction of what is right and
wrong - Primarily genetic, can also be influenced by
national culture, parents, teachers, friends, and
other environmental factors - Differ between generations, regions, cultures
- Fairly stable over time
- Influence attitudes and behaviours
41Communicating
- Value Systems
- Ranking an individuals values in terms of
intensity - Rokeach Value Survey
- Terminal values are the end-state we hope to
achieve in life - Instrumental values are means of achieving these
terminal values
42Rokeach Value Survey
- To complete the survey, number all the terminal
values from 1 to 18 in order of importance - Repeat with instrumental values
- TODAY Take 5 minutes and pick
- your top choices on both sides
43Communicating
- In groups assess how the following people might
react/behave in this scenerio based on their
values - You are working the late shift and for the 3rd
day in a row, the physician has asked you to stay
late again (overtime) and do another stat
patient. - I value an exciting life
- I value freedom
- I am ambitious
- I am honest
- How would you react in this situation? How does
your reaction align with your values?
44- If you want to understand a persons behavior,
you must understand his/her values.
45Conclusion
- Education model of preceptorship
- formative vs summative feedback
- Preceptor framework
- Shelter the student when learning
- Conflict management
- Debriefing
- Facilitate the students learning
- Learning styles
- One minute preceptor
- Values reflective practice
46Mentoring Matters
- The role of mentoring rather than imparting
information is very challenging
47References
- Barnum, B. S. (1997). Precepting, not mentoring
or teaching Vive la différence. In J. P. Flynn
(Ed.), The role of the preceptor A guide for
nurse educators and clinicians (pp. 1 14). New
York Springer Publishing Company, Inc. - Belcher, A. E. (1997) Beyond preceptorships
Internships and externships, fellowships/apprentic
eships and mentorships. In J. P. Flynn (Ed.), The
role of the preceptor A guide for nurse
educators and clinicians. (pp. 119 137). New
York Springer Publishing Company, Inc. - Canadian Medical Association. (2001). Program
assessment report. Ottawa CMA. - Debling, G. (1999). Skill retention and decay An
extract from the report of a project conducted on
behalf of the College of Physical Therapists of
BC. Unpublished manuscript. - Driscoll, M. P. (2000). Psychology of learning
for instruction. Boston Allyn and Bacon. - Munby, H., Versnel, J., Hutchinson, N. L., Chin,
P., Berg, D. H. (2002, April). Workplace
learning and the metacognitive functions of
routines. Paper presented at the annual meeting
of the American Educational Research Association,
New Orleans, LA. - Öhrling, K., Hallberg, I. R. (2001). The
meaning of preceptorship Nurses lived
experience of being a preceptor. Journal of
Advanced Nursing, 33(4), pp. 530-540. - OMara, A. M. (1997). A model preceptor program
for student nurses. In J. P. Flynn (Ed.), The
role of the preceptor A guide for nurse
educators and clinicians (pp. 47 74). New York
Springer Publishing Company, Inc. - Practicum study for health and public safety.
(2003). Calgary, Canada HSS-Health Service
Solutions. - Wilson, M. A. (2002). Dietetic preceptors
perceive their role to include a variety of
elements. Journal of the American Dietetic
association, 102(7), pp. 968-975. Retrieved from
ProQuest February, 25, 2005.
48Questions?