Clinical Teaching Made Easy – A Practical Guide to Teaching and Learning in Clinical SettingsClinical Teaching Made Easy – A Practical Guide to Teaching and Learning in Clinical Settings

2011 ◽  
Vol 25 (34) ◽  
pp. 26-26
Author(s):  
Judith Palfreyman
2020 ◽  
pp. emermed-2019-208908
Author(s):  
Chung-Hsien Chaou ◽  
Shiuan-Ruey Yu ◽  
Roy Yi Ling Ngerng ◽  
Lynn Valerie Monrouxe ◽  
Li-Chun Chang ◽  
...  

BackgroundFeedback is an effective pedagogical tool in clinical teaching and learning, but the actual perception by learners of clinical feedback is often described as unsatisfactory. Unlike assessment feedback or teaching sessions, which often happen within protected time and space, clinical feedback is influenced by numerous clinical factors. Little is known about clinical teachers’ motivations to provide feedback in busy clinical settings. We aimed to investigate the motivations behind feedback being given in emergency departments (EDs).MethodsA qualitative analysis of semi-structured interview data was conducted between August 2015 and June 2016. Eighteen attending physicians were purposively sampled from three teaching hospital EDs in Taiwan. Data were thematically analysed, both inductively (from the data) and deductively (using self-determination theory (SDT)). Themes were mapped to the different motivation types identified by the SDT.Results and discussionDespite working in busy clinical settings, Taiwanese ED clinical teachers reported being motivated to provide feedback when they felt responsible for their learners, when they understood the importance of feedback (patient safety and partner building), or simply because they were committed to following a tradition of passing on their clinical knowledge to their juniors. Suggestions to facilitate the internalisation of external motivations are proposed.ConclusionsIn this qualitative study, motivations for clinical feedback were identified. Although the motivations are mostly extrinsic, the elicitation of internal motivation is possible once true satisfaction is fostered during the feedback-giving process. This understanding can be used to develop interventions to enable clinical feedback to be provided in a sustained manner.


2008 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 56-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jill K. Duthie

Abstract Clinical supervisors in university based clinical settings are challenged by numerous tasks to promote the development of self-analysis and problem-solving skills of the clinical student (American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, ASHA, 1985). The Clinician Directed Hierarchy is a clinical training tool that assists the clinical teaching process by directing the student clinician’s focus to a specific level of intervention. At each of five levels of intervention, the clinician develops an understanding of the client’s speech/language target behaviors and matches clinical support accordingly. Additionally, principles and activities of generalization are highlighted for each intervention level. Preliminary findings suggest this is a useful training tool for university clinical settings. An essential goal of effective clinical supervision is the provision of support and guidance in the student clinician’s development of independent clinical skills (Larson, 2007). The student clinician is challenged with identifying client behaviors in the therapeutic process and learning to match his or her instructions, models, prompts, reinforcement, and use of stimuli appropriately according to the client’s needs. In addition, the student clinician must be aware of techniques in the intervention process that will promote generalization of new communication behaviors. Throughout the intervention process, clinicians are charged with identifying appropriate target behaviors, quantifying the progress of the client’s acquisition of the targets, and making adjustments within and between sessions as necessary. Central to the development of clinical skills is the feedback provided by the clinical supervisor (Brasseur, 1989; Moss, 2007). Particularly in the early stages of clinical skills development, the supervisor is challenged with addressing numerous aspects of clinical performance and awareness, while ensuring the client’s welfare (Moss). To address the management of clinician and client behaviors while developing an understanding of the clinical intervention process, the University of the Pacific has developed and begun to implement the Clinician Directed Hierarchy.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (7) ◽  
pp. 44
Author(s):  
Norma Ivette Beltran Lugo ◽  
Betsy Flores Atilano ◽  
Dulce María Guillén Cadena

<div>La ense&ntilde;anza se concibe como la tarea m&aacute;s peculiar de la escuela, cuyas funciones educativas deben estructurarse (P&eacute;rez G&oacute;mez, 1992) en torno a dos funciones. El acto de ense&ntilde;ar no es responsabilidad totalmente del docente universitario, sino que involucra al personal operativo de las instituciones de salud. La ense&ntilde;anza cl&iacute;nica es el momento donde se tiene contacto con el mundo real y los diferentes ambientes que se generan para la construcci&oacute;n de nuevos h&aacute;bitos profesionales, el desarrollo de la empat&iacute;a con la disciplina y hasta el gusto de ser enfermero. La problem&aacute;tica que tenemos actualmente es que a veces el personal de Enfermer&iacute;a da por hecho que los y las estudiantes ya tienen los conocimientos pero sobre todo las habilidades pr&aacute;cticas para ejecutar intervenciones que implican gran responsabilidad, pero cuando la alumna demuestra que no tiene esas habilidades es desplazada y limitada a la observaci&oacute;n. El profesorado debe tener una formaci&oacute;n continua y tambi&eacute;n debe salir a hacer pr&aacute;cticas cl&iacute;nicas para que de esta forma no pierda las habilidades y destrezas en la ejecuci&oacute;n de diversos procedimientos de Enfermer&iacute;a. Aunque existe el programa de estancias cl&iacute;nicas para profesores, &eacute;stos deben ser comprometidos a ejecutarlas independientemente de que laboren en alg&uacute;n otro lugar, ya que de &eacute;sta forma se pueden actualizar en las nuevas tecnolog&iacute;as del cuidado y tendr&aacute;n herramientas muy &uacute;tiles durante su ense&ntilde;anza.</div><div><br /></div><div><div>Teaching is conceived as the most peculiar task of the school, which educative functions must be structured (P&eacute;rez G&oacute;mez, 1992) around two functions. The act of teaching isn&rsquo;t the universitarian teacher&rsquo;s responsibility completely, but also the health institutions&rsquo; personnel&acute;s. Clinical teaching is the moment when contact is had with the actual world and the different environments created to construct new professional habits, development of empathy and even the joy of being a nurse. The issue we currently have is that sometimes nursing personnel take for granted that students already have all the knowledge, but mostly all the practical abilities to perform interventions that imply great responsibility, but when the student shows the lack those skills, they&rsquo;re set aside and limited to observation only. Teaching personnel needs to have a continuous formation and they also have to do clinical practices so this way they won&acute;t lose the abilities and dexterities on the execution of different nursing procedures. Even though there&rsquo;s the clinical settings program for teachers, they have to be committed to execute it, whether they work or not at other place, so this way caring technologies can be updated and they&rsquo;ll have very useful tools for teaching.</div></div><div><br /></div>


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