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Welcome to the Working Group!. Outcomes for today?.Defining what
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1. MUMEENAFaculty Development Richard Fuller, Anne Marie Reid
Leeds Institute of Medical Education
School of Medicine, University of Leeds, UK
2. Welcome to the Working Group! Outcomes for today….
Defining what & who are ‘Professional’ teachers
Agreeing models of Faculty Development
Designing a Teacher Training Centre
Developing local faculty development – and content
3. Activities
‘Mini Lectures’ (memory stick provided)
Group Discussion
Small group work and exercises to design the TTC and staff development activities
4. Needs Analysis 1(TSU and TMSU) Critical that successful faculty development is contextual:
Institutional & Curriculum Readiness
Evidence of faculty development
Levers for change & Potential Barriers
Key needs
Important considerations (infrastructure, training, healthcare, regulation etc)
5. For example, we are aware from TMSU/TSU needs analysis that Continuing Professional Development programmes are at an early stage – but there is legislation for licenses for practice
This provides opportunities to improve CPD and accreditation by linkage with evidence for a license to practice
6. Needs Analysis 2TMSU Evidence of positive change:
Previous EU review of TMSU
Improving the programme - Moving clinical practice earlier into the curriculum
Curriculum Committee
Great introduction of modern methods of assessment (e.g. OSCE) Needs?
Cultural change to accommodate new ways of working
Introducing successful quality assurance
Curriculum integration (e.g. CBCR)
Faculty development (e.g. build on success with OSCE)
Research skills (and training for staff in teaching this)
7. Needs Analysis 3TSU Some good progress already!
Successful self review using WFME standards
Quality Assurance committee
Strategic planning to help curriculum and staff (e.g. reduction in disciplines in year 1)
Great approaches to integration (e.g. integrated science modules in year 2 and 3) Needs?
Develop existing culture of change and improvement
Use WFME standards again to build confidence in QA
Scope for deeper curriculum integration
Successful faculty development with limited resources
Research skills (and training for staff in teaching this)
8. Professionalisation of Teaching and Teachers Myths and Legends…..
9. Content
Myths of medical teaching
Measuring excellence in teaching
10. Myth 1
Effective teaching is not important and medical students succeed despite of medical school attendance
11. So…….
Does the quality of teaching actually influence student performance?
12. Excellence in clinical teaching & student exam performance
13. Griffith et al 2000 Concluded that there is an association between better clinical teaching with better student examination performance
14. Conclusion 1
Good teaching is important in producing competent doctors
15. Myth 2
Self directed learning is the ideal learning method for students
16. What about the ‘Adult Learner’? Described by Malcolm Knowles in 1973
Andragogy – the art and science of adult education
In brief…..
Adult learners are more motivated by internal forces than external forces
Hence self directed learning is a natural state for adult learners
17. However….. Self directed learning requires the identification of areas of weakness which need to be addressed
Self assessment is therefore a vital component
18. Andragogy and Medical Education? But:
Studies of (medical) students have shown weaknesses at self assessment (Gordon 1991)
Teaching self assessment has limited success (Gordon 1992)
People gravitate to those areas they like and are good at (Sibley et al 1982) – and this is no different for adults….
The psychological motivation for medical students learning is dependent on many and varied factors (Misch 2002)
19. Conclusion 2
We shouldn’t depend on self-directed learning
We still need good teachers
20. Myth 3
Good teachers are born not made
21. One of the most important lessons I learnt about teaching came before I was in medicine or had ever taught.
While studying ballet, I saw that even the most talented dancer at the New York City Ballet had to work hard to succeed. Talent along was not enough.
Great teachers know this.
22. On expertise……..
No such thing as innate talent
Expertise comes from deliberate practise
10,000 hours or 10 years
The key to success is continued challenge
23. Conclusion 3
Teaching is like any other skill
You become an expert by hard work and deliberate practise
24. Myth 4
Teaching is (just) the transmission of facts
25. Facts “Now what I want is facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but facts. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out everything else.
You can only form the minds of reasoning animals upon facts: nothing else will ever be of service to them.”
Thomas Gradgrind in
Charles Dickens’s Hard Times
26. Information doubling times
27.
We are drowning in information and starving for knowledge
Rutherford Roger
28. Conclusion 4
Modern teachers need to help learners create their own knowledge from the ever expanding mass of information
29. How do we measure excellence?
Excellence in Teaching = Technical competence
x approach to teaching
x personal development
30. Technical competence (TC)
TC = I(eq) + R(eq) + F(eq) + A(eq) + C(eq) + L(eq)
I information giver
R Role model
F Facilitator
A Assessor
C Curriculum planner
L Learning resource developer
e extent
q quality
31. Approach to teaching (AtT)
AtT = S x E x D x T
S = Scientific principles of education
E = Ethics and attitude
D = Decision making (BEME)
T = Team worker
32. Personal Development (P)
P keeps up to date
shares expertise with others
assesses their own competence
33. Summary Better teaching = better chances of student performance
Good teachers are more successful than self directed learning
Good teachers are the product of technical expertise, deliberate practice and sustained effort
Their excellence is a product of competence, approach and professional development
34. Exercise Develop criteria for a professional teacher in your own institution
Use student, peer and institutional view points
35. Feedback……
36. Coffee and comfort break
37. Designing Faculty Development programmes
38.
Summary from Anne Marie’s talk:
Good teaching is important in producing competent doctors
To achieve expertise, we need hard work and deliberate practice
Modern teachers need to help learners in age of information explosion
Teaching excellence is more than technical competence – it demands personal development. Professionalising Faculty
39. Planning
Travelling
Arriving
Reflecting The journey ahead…..
40. Key stages
Planning
Travelling
Arriving
Reflecting Activity
Key elements/context
Using organisational theory & creating change
Modelling the programme & measuring success Designing a successful programme
41. Planning your programme:What are the key elements?
42. Planning your programme – key elements
43. Key elements – Institution Institutional support – commitment to professionalising and developing teachers & teaching pan-institution(s)
Curriculum
Faculty development must be in context, and follow curriculum in ‘real time’
Faculty development must mirror the relationship between programme and activity of teachers (one of the problems with PBL)
Understand local delivery
Dornan. Med Educ. 2005;39
Lieff. . Academic Medicine. 2009;84(1)
44. Cost
Of delivering a faculty development programme
Of faculty attending & participating
Of not using resources wisely (some excellent programmes in low income countries)
45. Key elements – Institution 2 Ethos & culture (& why do those most in need fail to attend?)
Valuing activity
Making opportunities for career development & improvement
Professional recognition (especially where health and university are separate) and acceptance of culture
Reward (financial, professional)
Steinert. Med Educ. 2009;43
46. Faculty – who are they?
Junior or senior?
Clinical or non-clinical?
Undergraduate or postgraduate?
Bedside/opportunistic teaching vs. greater levels of involvement?
Scholars, researchers, educators?
47. Faculty – what do they do? Traditional ‘view’
Teaching skills
Assessor training
Supervision & Feedback
Alternative view?
self awareness & peer coaching
Using Theory and practice
Technology enhancement
Curriculum change, research skills
Pololi. Med Educ. 2005;39
48. Faculty - environment Critical to planning successful CPD
Are faculty central or distributed (geographically)?
Online / bitesize (opportunistic faculty development for opportunistic teachers?)
Satellite – central agreement, local delivery
Centralised activity
49. Linking curriculum and faculty development – how have others done it?
Bowe. Med Educ. 2003;37
Loeser. Academic Medicine.2007;82(4) Using organisational change to manage curriculum development
Creating urgency
Guiding coalition
Vision & Strategy
Communicate
Short Term wins
Consolidate & anchor within the institution
50.
Using organisational change to manage Faculty development
Identifying conflict between curriculum & commitment
Coalition – transforming into action
Dealing with fears and concerns
Pilot projects and monitoring
Evaluation
51. Ripple Model – rural medical school More distributed faculty
Use organisational change to improve what people do
Extend and share this
Watch the ripple effect through faculty
Saw positive changes in institutional identity Suchman. J Gen Intern Med. 2004;19
52. Fish hook Centralised faculty change
Key factors all common in organisational change methodology
Range of impacts
Scholarly growth
More network ties
Increasing status and credibility by peers Baker. Med Educ . 2010;44
53. Arrival (and Exercise) Modelling your solution must be contextual
Literature (and experience!) suggest that an iterative, evolutionary pattern of change more successful
Subject your faculty programme to a needs analysis
Peers (faculty)
Curriculum
Institution(s)
Choose a model of faculty development that will best meet your curriculum, faculty and students
54. Feedback
55. Feedback
56. Lunch Break!
57. Faculty Development UnitsDesign and infrastructure
58. Building your TTC Revisit your model
Evolutionary, Revolutionary or new?
Vital to base your project plan around the chosen model, context and needs
59. Resources
Staff
Leadership & Management
Project planning
Measuring outputs (later in this session) Building Blocks
60. Technology
Tempting to rely on latest IT
Critically question how IT adds value (no different from learning)
Concentrate efforts on support for distance learning, or reusable objects (e.g. for examiner training) Requirements
61. Physical Space
What is the minimum space requirement?
Is it available now?
Permanent usage as FDU or shared?
Location & Access?
Economic support? Requirements
62. Cross linkage with the staff development group
What resources already exist locally?
What resources are adaptable from elsewhere (caution: language and cultural translation)?
What resources do you need to develop – and in what order?
Aim for content that maps onto project aims – and sees repeated use by Faculty Requirements – Content & Resource
63. Who can attend?
Who must attend?
Who needs to attend?
‘Ensuring those most in need most likely to attend’
Publicity
Inducements – rewards and success stories more effective than compulsion
Qualifications? Staff
64. Academic leadership
Use organisational theory models to guide strategic development
Coalition, vision, short term ‘wins’ etc
Imperative that this interlinks with curriculum committee and programme
Administration and management of FDU
Organisation/Coordination
Publicity
Measurement
Leadership & Management
65. Achievable timeline!!
Resourcing
Collaboration
Quality Assurance
Aim for measurable goals along the way to help publicize success (including to the student body) Project planning
66.
Identify the key ‘building blocks’ within your curriculum and medical school using the checklist crib
Spend time designing your model of the TTC and how it will work
Suggest a timeline Small group Exercise
67. Faculty Development Training teachers
68. To identify who are the teachers
To consider current roles and responsibilities of staff
To identify Faculty Development needs
To plan Faculty Development programme
Aims
69. Academic staff
Research staff
Clinical staff
Students- peer teaching
Patients?
Others? Who are the teachers
70. Is there currently a good balance of academic, clinical, support staff or should this change?
How are staff recruited for teaching?
How are staff development needs identified?
How are staff equipped for teaching?
What opportunities exist for
professional development?
Current training programme
71. Do staff have a teaching workload which is balanced with other activities such as clinical practice/research?
Is there a process for monitoring workload?
Is there a process for identifying development needs?
Is there Institutional support for
ongoing staff development?
Roles and responsibilities of staff
72. Summary from earlier slides…. Better teaching = better chances of student performance
Good teachers are more successful than self directed learning
Good teachers are the product of technical expertise, deliberate practice and sustained effort
Their excellence is a product of competence, approach and professional development
73. Can teaching occur without learning?
Can learning occur without teaching?
Which should be the priority?
Learning and Teaching
74. Subjects are best understood when they are taught in the context in which they will be needed i.e. When the theory is applied to practice
Current learning theory shows that as we are naturally sociable, learning occurs most effectively when students are given the opportunity to learn actively alongside others Learning theory
75. Students should be actively involved in learning
Opportunities for peer support and group-work -helps students to develop better understanding
Student-centred teaching allows students to learn at their own pace
Frequent checks on learning & feedback
improve students’ performance
Implications?
76. Less emphasis on teacher as ‘expert’
Less emphasis on teaching, more emphasis on creating opportunities for learning
Teacher as facilitator- encouraging students to learn together with guidance
Encourage ‘active’ learners
Emphasis on feedback - supports further learning
Role of teacher?
77. More engaged students having more fun
Students more responsibility for own learning
Teachers spend time on designing more creative ways for learning and less on routine lecturing
More effective learning
More independent students - more active in learning in clinical years
Better doctors – able to identify own learning needs – maintain high standards of patient care
Advantages?
78.
How do you match the content to the learning outcomes?
What teaching methods do you currently use?
Could you make these more ‘learner ’centred’?
What other teaching methods would you like to use? Designing Learning & Teaching
79. Understanding how students learn
Designing and planning teaching sessions
How to make lectures more interactive
How to involve students fully in seminars
Designing tutorial and small group sessions
Learning & Teaching workshops – possible themes
80. Understanding student-centred learning through enquiry-based learning methods
Teaching clinical skills effectively
Using technology in supporting teaching
How to design good assessment methods
Workshop themes continued
81. Any questions?
82.
Identify which of these workshops would be of value (and why)? What else would be helpful
How would you design and build content?
How would you (and others) be able to apply the lessons from the workshops in your teaching activity?
What are the priorities? Suggest a timeline for introducing workshops. Small group Exercise
83. Feedback and Summary
84. Faculty Development :Putting it all together…..in Leeds
85. Reflection – Measuring Success What to evaluate
Activity
Numbers attending
Perceptions of quality
Impact
Faculty – future activities, progress, engagement
Curriculum – impact on teaching & assessment (e.g. OSCE)
Institution – research outputs, identity..
Output - Professionalised students (Papadakis) Cole. Academic Medicine. 2004;79(5)
86. How to evaluate Predicated on ‘what’ you are evaluating – but must be systematic
Simple, individual level quantitative data
Short wins, Evidence of success
More complex, longitudinal programme activity evaluation (e.g. CIPP)
Context – setting, and environment
Input – resource (financial, supporters, stakeholders)
Process – descriptive
Product – impact (including post organisational change)
87. Putting it all together Useful resources:
BEME guide (2006)
AMEE guide (2008)
Helpful focus on implementation and evaluation Steinert. BEME guide 2006
McClean .AMEE guide 2008
88. Small group activity Work in your groups (e.g. 3a and 3b) to complete the reporting grids
You will have some more time tomorrow to build on these – looking at quality and change
This will help you present your plan to the wider group on Wednesday afternoon
89. Complete each project activity (marked with a MUMEENA reference) against these questions
What did you do in the workshop?
Who was involved
Summarise what was achieved
What do you need to do next?
When does this need to be done by (some actions will be ‘immediate’ and some ‘later’) Day 2 – Reporting Grid 1
90. We want you to use the material you worked on together in reporting grid 1
Think about the messages from the quality presentation this morning:
Reflect on your outcomes – how would you measure quality/quality assure outcomes?
What is the impact of change – on roles and responsibilities
Where are you on the PDSA cycle (you can record this as P, D, S or A with an explanation)
Day 3 Reporting Grid 2