1 / 26

UIUC College of Medicine: Teaching Curriculum

Develop a strategy for teaching medical students effectively with this teaching curriculum from UIUC College of Medicine. Learn about orienting learners, setting goals, independent learning, feedback, managing learners, bedside teaching, lecturing, teaching with literature, and more.

schoenfeld
Download Presentation

UIUC College of Medicine: Teaching Curriculum

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UIUC College of Medicine: Teaching Curriculum Developing a Strategy for Teaching Medical Students Effectively Jennie Hsu-Lumetta, M.D.

  2. “He teaches best who shows his students not what to think, but how to think…” Alan Gregg

  3. Mission (not impossible!): Become the best educator you can be

  4. ACGME General Competency: Practice Based Learning and Improvement: Facilitate the learning of students and other health care professionals

  5. Teaching Skills Topics 1. Orienting a Learner 2. The Five Microskills 3. Setting Goals 4. Independent Learning 5. Feedback 6. Evaluation 7. Managing Learners at Different Levels 8. Bedside Teaching 9. Lecturing 10. The Problem Learner 11. Teaching with the Literature 12. Teaching with Time Constraints

  6. So you have a medical student … What do you do next?

  7. “not so much what to teach, but how to teach…” • Sir William Osler, 1899

  8. Assess Plan Reflect Teach

  9. Setting Goals for Learners: Developing An Educational Plan for Medical Students Jennie Hsu-Lumetta, M.D.

  10. Strategy for Setting Learning Goals Five considerations in setting reasonable and achievable goals: 1. Experience 2. Identification 3. Strategies 4. Time Lines 5. Review

  11. Prior Experience • a. Education (coursework; research) • b. Professional • c. Previous medical experience • d. Previous clerkships • e. Experience/comfort with medical procedures • Some prompts: • ü Page 12 of clerkship manual: list of procedures • ü Procedure Log Book (optional activity)

  12. Identify Appropriate Goals • Short term (e.g.: this rotation) • Long term (e.g.: entire Medicine I course)

  13. Establishment of Goals • Define goals as learner behaviors • Prioritize goals • Re-establish goals (over time)

  14. Establishment of Goals – Domains • Knowledge • Skills • Attitude

  15. Expression of Goals • State goals clearly and concisely • State goals as learner behaviors • State relevance of goals to learners • State expected level of competence • Repeat goals periodically

  16. Negotiation of Goals • Check out learner acceptance of teacher’s goals • Ask learners for their goals • Agree on goals

  17. Strategies to Help Students Meet Their Goals • Seeing patients (best!) • Reading list in their clerkship manual • Answer questions relating to different systems in their clerkship manual • Supplemental readings you provide or suggest • Attend core lectures • Attend noon conferences • Participate in Teaching Attending Rounds • Discuss patients, findings, readings or conferences with your student

  18. Set Time Lines • ü Realistic • ü Written • ü Involve accountability

  19. Review the Plan • ü Provide feedback on progress • ü Identify potential barriers • ü Adjust the plan as needed

  20. Your Job as Teacher • ü Initiate the conversation about learning goals • ü Help student make a plan that make sense • ü Make the student be accountable for the goals • he or she has set • ü Give feedback on reaching the goals • ü Have student adjust goals as needed

  21. Teaching Techniques ü Give responsibility to build student’s confidence ü Be patient ü Speak clearly at an appropriate level and pace ü Write down information ü Teach key concepts ü Repeat as needed

  22. The Microskills Model 1. Get a commitment 2. Probe for supporting evidence 3. Teach General Rules 4. Reinforce what was right 5. Correct Mistakes

  23. 5 Microskills of Teaching Call on= Commitment (Ask, “What do you think is going on?”) Sunday= Supporting evidence (Ask, “How did you arrive at that conclusion?”) Generates= General rules (Teach general principles) Rounds on= Right (Commend what the student did right, give feedback) Monday=Mistakes (Correct mistakes)

  24. The Student’s Role • ü Become a Self-Directed Learner • ü Taking responsibility for his/her own learning

  25. Program Resources • 1. Electronic version of Medicine I Student Manual: • http://www.med.uiuc.edu/m34/clerkships/internalmed/manual02-03/index.htm • 2. Goal-Setting Resources: • http://www.med.uiuc.edu/residency/internalMed/posters/Personal.pdf

  26. Case • You are the senior resident on the medicine service at the beginning of the rotation. • You have (choose 1): • 3rd year medical student • 4th year medical student • Intern • Establish, Express and Negotiate some Learning Goals based on Knowledge, Skills, and/or Attitudes

More Related