Abstract
IntroductionFormative evaluations of clinical teaching for emergency medicine (EM) faculty are limited. The goal of this study was to develop a behaviorally-based tool for evaluating and providing feedback to EM faculty based on their clinical teaching skills during a shift.MethodsWe used a three-phase structured development process. Phase 1 used the nominal group technique with a group of faculty first and then with residents to generate potential evaluation items. Phase 2 included separate focus groups and used a modified Delphi technique with faculty and residents, as well as a group of experts to evaluate the items generated in Phase 1. Following this, residents classified the items into novice, intermediate, and advanced educator skills. Once items were determined for inclusion and subsequently ranked they were built into the tool by the investigators (Phase 3).ResultsThe final instrument, the “Faculty Shift Card,” is a behaviorally-anchored evaluation and feedback tool used to facilitate feedback to EM faculty about their teaching skills during a shift. The tool has four domains: teaching clinical decision-making; teaching interpersonal skills; teaching procedural skills; and general teaching strategies. Each domain contains novice, intermediate, and advanced sections with 2–5 concrete examples for each level of performance.ConclusionThis structured process resulted in a well-grounded and systematically developed evaluation tool for EM faculty that can provide real-time actionable feedback to faculty and support improved clinical teaching.
Highlights
Formative evaluations of clinical teaching for emergency medicine (EM) faculty are limited
The goal of this study was to develop a behaviorally-based tool for evaluating and providing feedback to EM faculty based on their clinical teaching skills during a shift
We used processes outlined in the National Institutes of Health (NIH) PROMIS standards to develop the Faculty Shift Card
Summary
Formative evaluations of clinical teaching for emergency medicine (EM) faculty are limited. The goal of this study was to develop a behaviorally-based tool for evaluating and providing feedback to EM faculty based on their clinical teaching skills during a shift. Formative evaluations of clinical teaching for emergency medicine (EM) faculty are limited and inadequate.[1,2] Current EM faculty evaluations of teaching are usually based on an entire year and evaluate faculty across a range of teaching, patient care, and research activities using an ordinal scale (e.g., 1 = below expectations, 9 = exceeds expectations).[3] These summative, end-of-year evaluations of faculty are usually high stakes with linkage to promotion, tenure, awards, and personnel decisions. The results of summative evaluations are often limited in terms of comments with specific feedback
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