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Your Career as a Medical Educator – Guidance for UTMB Faculty

Your Career as a Medical Educator – Guidance for UTMB Faculty. Michael Ainsworth, MD Professor, Internal Medicine Associate Dean, Regional Medical Education. Objectives. To answer the most common faculty questions about medical education What are the opportunities to teach?

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Your Career as a Medical Educator – Guidance for UTMB Faculty

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  1. Your Career as a Medical Educator – Guidance for UTMB Faculty Michael Ainsworth, MD Professor, Internal Medicine Associate Dean, Regional Medical Education

  2. Objectives • To answer the most common faculty questions about medical education • What are the opportunities to teach? • How can I develop my skills in medical education? • How can I prioritize time spent in medical education? • How do medical education activities influence career advancement?

  3. Hallmarks of “Good Teachers” • Knowledge • Command of the current state of knowledge in their area • Make knowledge accessible • Communicate effectively • Adapt to the needs of the audience • Convey a sense of genuine enthusiasm for both the subject matter and student mastery • Able to evaluate their learners • Determine their own effectiveness

  4. Why Do You Teach? • Career goal • Want (expect) to be judged on education as a substantial part of your responsibilities • You should excel • Personal satisfaction • Sense of pride; makes patient care more rewarding • You can excel • You have no choice • Students and residents are around me and it is an expectation, not something I value • Responsible performance is expected, but you are unlikely to excel

  5. Why Do You Teach? • You have no choice • Students and residents are around me and it is an expectation • Responsible performance is expected, but you are unlikely to excel What are the opportunities to teach? How can I develop my skills in medical education? How can I prioritize time spent in medical education? How do medical education activities influence career advancement?

  6. Prioritizing Time in Education • Teach what is teachable • What does the course/program expect • What are you in a position to do/judge • Interest in the learner and the patient • Learners know you are busy • Best role model is excellent clinical care • Manage your time • One-minute preceptor, “wave” scheduling • Engage the learner • Expect them to know their patients

  7. Why Do You Teach? • Personal satisfaction • Sense of pride; makes patient care more rewarding • You can excel What are the opportunities to teach? How can I develop my skills in medical education? How can I prioritize time spent in medical education? How do medical education activities influence career advancement?

  8. Opportunities to Teach • During direct patient care • Balance two roles • Self-contained • Outside of direct patient care • Large-group (lectures) • Smaller group (case/problem-based learning) • Assessment exercises (standardized-patient exams) • Other • Advising/mentoring • Clinical research What is your strength?

  9. Developing Skills in Medical Education • Lectures • Often part of a series - a few hours/year • Workshops • Often dispersed - few half-days per year • Courses • Some by specialty societies - a few days/year • Programs • UTMB Scholars in Education - 3 hrs/month x 18 months plus a project • National programs - weeks to months Accommodates a range of needs

  10. Why Do You Teach? • Career goal • Want (expect) to be judged on education as a substantial part of your responsibilities • You should excel What are the opportunities to teach? How can I develop my skills in medical education? How can I prioritize time spent in medical education? How do medical education activities influence career advancement?

  11. Assess Yourself and Your Environment • Yourself • Ready to make education a priority? • Are you comfortable with authority/leadership? • What job skills do you need to succeed? • Your environment • Are there opportunities to develop teaching skills? • Can you identify a mentor? • Can you negotiate a satisfactory time commitment? Just like research and patient care, you must be prepared to excel if you wish to succeed on the basis of educational effort

  12. Medical Education as a Career • Must coordinate with program’s expectations • What if your boss has other ideas? Has such a discussion taken place? • Need a support system • Mentors can help you with goals, ideas, and skills Most faculty never establish such a person • Need a way to document accomplishments • The CV of most faculty does not do this well Must communicate educational accomplishments

  13. Medical Education

  14. Medical Education

  15. Criticisms of EducationalPeer Review • Peer review is not necessary • Myth: I know how to teach • Fact: Few of us have any training in education • Peer review is not possible • Myth: Good teaching is all about style • Fact: Several ways to measure effectiveness • Peer review is too personal and intimidating • Myth: Too demeaning to critique a peer’s teaching • Fact: Accepted in research and patient care

  16. How to Deal With Peer Review

  17. Traits of Successful Medical Educators • Maintained a dialogue with their boss • Sought opportunities to advance their skills • Sought and maintained a relationship with a mentor • Created a portfolio • Sought opportunities to demonstrate leadership • Solicited peer review

  18. Conceptual Thresholds for Advancement for Educators* *These represent guidelines for faculty on the non-tenure track, and are the views of Dr. Ainsworth, not a specific policy for advancement. Departments and promotion committees consider the qualifications of each candidate individually.

  19. Success and Happinessas a Medical Educator • Talk to your boss • Take advantage of courses and workshops • Find a mentor • Start a portfolio • Seek leadership roles • Solicit peer review • Realize some of this will be “on your own time”

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