Abstract
Audience: This workshop is intended for faculty members in an emergency medicine (or other) residency program, but is also appropriate for chief residents and medical student clerkship educators. Introduction: Faculty development sessions are required by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and enhance the learning environment within residency programs. Resident as teacher sessions are important in helping residents transition from junior learners to supervisors of medical students and junior residents. Part I of this two-part workshop introduces learners to effective techniques to engaging learners with clinical and bedside teaching.Objectives: By the end of this workshop, the learner will: 1) describe and implement nine new clinical teaching techniques; 2) implement clinical teaching techniques specific to junior and senior resident learners.Methods: This educational session is uses several blended instructional methods, including team-based learning (modified), the flipped classroom, audience response systems, pause procedures.Topics: Faculty development, clinical teaching, bedside teaching, one-minute preceptor, two-minute observership, teaching scripts, Aunt Minnie, SPIT, activated demonstration, teaching scripts.
Highlights
Faculty development sessions are required by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and enhance the learning environment within residency programs.[1]
Recommended Number of Learners per Instructor: This faculty development session has been tested on groups of 20 to 80 faculty members
The readiness assurance process ensures that the learner “knows” the material
Summary
Faculty development sessions are required by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and enhance the learning environment within residency programs.[1]. Part two of this two-part workshop introduces learners to effective techniques to engaging learners with clinical and bedside teaching
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More From: Journal of Education and Teaching in Emergency Medicine
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