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Faculty Development. CLINICAL TEACHING SKILLS. LEARNING OBJECTIVES. By the end of the course participants will have: Discussed principles of effective learning Identified the role of feedback in developing learners Understood the role of questioning in stimulating learning
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Faculty Development CLINICAL TEACHING SKILLS
LEARNING OBJECTIVES By the end of the course participants will have: • Discussed principles of effective learning • Identified the role of feedback in developing learners • Understood the role of questioning in stimulating learning • Planned and delivered a 5-minute teaching session • Provided constructive feedback for colleagues • Discussed ways to plan and structure workplace learning
APPROACHES USED • DISCURSIVE – information sharing • EXPERIMENTAL – exploring new teaching strategies • EXPERIENTIAL – peer group learning
CLINICAL TEACHING SKILLS Conscious competence (C/C) Conscious incompetence (C/IC) CONSCIOUSNESS Unconscious competence (UC/C) Unconscious incompetence (UC/IC) COMPETENCE
THE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT Cast your mind back to a time when you were a learner: • Think of a good learning experience and identify the factors that made it good • Think of a bad learning experience and identify the factors that made it bad
PRINCIPLES OF ADULT LEARNING Learning depends on motivation Capacity to learn Experiences must be meaningful Active involvement Outcome driven Feedback Regular review
IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHERS Always start with a learning needs analysis so that you can assess the level of your learners Consider the relevance to them of the subject This can save time so that you tailor what you say to their needs It also establishes a dialogue – the first step in engagement
YERKES–DODSON LAW Performance Optimal performance Challenge Comfort zone/ collusion High anxiety interferes with performance Asleep Arousal
CLINICAL TEACHING SKILLS 3. What could you improve? 1. What do you think you did well? C/C C/IC CONSCIOUSNESS 4. I think you could improve… 2. I think you did well at… UC/IC UC/C COMPETENCE
‘Giving feedback is not just to provide a judgement or evaluation. It is to provide [develop]insight. Without insight into their own limitations, trainees cannot process or resolve difficulties’ King (1999) FEEDBACK
SUMMARY Principles of learning – always start with learning needs Learning is about developing competence and awareness Degree of challenge and security Developing people requires good relationships and mutual trust Feedback is essential and needs to focus on behaviour not personality traits
In groups of 3, adopt the following roles in turn: teacher learner feedback giver For each 15-minute slot, the teacher takes 5 minutes to teach a small topic, then receives feedback for 10 minutes from the learner and feedback person MICROTEACHING
DEFINITIONS • AIM: general idea of where you want to go • OBJECTIVE: what trainer wants learner to do/think/know = TEACHING OBJECTIVE • OUTCOME: statement of what learner will achieve in terms of observable behaviour = LEARNING OUTCOME
SMART OUTCOMES • Specific • Measurable • Achievable • Relevant • Time bound
LEARNING OUTCOMES • By the end of today you will be able to write at least one learning outcome for • your session: • S – ‘at least one’ • M – has it been written? • A – only ‘one’ • R – related to day and task ahead • T – ‘by the end of today’
LEARNING OUTCOMES • Write List Show Revise Describe Specify Identify Analyse Assess Demonstrate Use Critique Explain Perform Apply Create Discuss Predict Make Design Compute Rate Utilise Plan Select Label Prepare Compare
DEVELOPING LEARNING OUTCOMES • Why do we need them? – to motivate – expectations – plan learning • What are they? – observable statements of action • How do we write them? – SMART
DISCUSSION – PROBLEMS • Conflict • Apathy • Group think • Unwillingness to speak • Dialogues • Monologues • Group dynamics
TEACHING SMALL GROUPS • Bridges theory–practice gap • Great for judgement and professionalism • 10 times more likely to change
TEACHING THROUGH QUESTIONS Statement disguised as a question Awareness- raising questions Humiliating questions Counselling questions Learning needs analysis Guess what I’m thinking Catalytic questions Mainly for the teacher Mainly for the learner
ACTION–REFLECTION CYCLE Collecting new information When, where, who Analysis – applying theory, concepts, models Why Reflection Planning How Observation What Action Action Hope & Timmel (1984)
STRUCTURING LEARNING • In your groups of 3, compile a list of the elements of teaching you found to be useful from the microteaching • What helped get the sessions started? • What helped the learning? • What enabled the sessions to close effectively?
LEARNING FRAMEWORK • In light of the work you have done today, consider what your view of a learning framework or a learning cycle would be • What would you say were the important steps or ingredients to ensure you had in any effective learning episode?
KEY THEMES • Learner-centred • Creating a safe learning environment • Teaching through questioning • Giving effective feedback for learning • Developing your teaching effectiveness • Setting learning outcomes • Organising learning sessions