Literature DB >> 28497991

Medical Students' Professional Development as Educators Revealed Through Reflections on Their Teaching Following a Students-as-Teachers Course.

Michelle H Yoon1, Benjamin C Blatt2, Larrie W Greenberg2.   

Abstract

Phenomenon: Teaching is an important part of the tri-partite mission of every medical center. Although teaching often is given lower priority and recognition as opposed to patient care and/or research, this activity for many physicians in academic medicine ranks second to their patient care responsibilities. Medical teacher training has traditionally been aimed at faculty and residents through faculty development initiatives, continuing education for physicians at professional conferences, formalized degree or certificate programs in education, and residents as teachers programs. More recently medical schools have developed medical-students-as-teachers programs, often offered as 4th-year electives, to introduce learners to the theory of teaching and learning with appropriate application in the clinical setting. Data on learner outcomes and students' perceptions and experiences in these programs consist mostly of their satisfaction after completing such a program. In this article we explore 4th-year medical student trainees' experiences and emerging self-concepts as educators during a teaching elective. APPROACH: The purpose of this project was to explore students' reflections on their experiences in a 4th-year medical students-as-teachers course in their own words through their written self-assessment narratives. We used qualitative content analysis to examine 96 trainees' self-reported, written reflective narratives of how they translated their students-as-teachers course experience into application by applying newly learned educational theories, instructional strategies, and feedback skills while teaching novice peers physical diagnosis skills.
FINDINGS: Narratives revealed candid self-assessments and detailed descriptions of their experiences and what they valued most from the course. Content analysis revealed nine key themes: using teaching strategies for adult learning, preparing for class, modeling professionalism, incorporating clinical correlations, exceeding course requirements, giving and receiving feedback, providing mentoring, creating a positive learning climate, and growing as educators. Insights: This study's results reveal how learners perceive and translate their experiences in a teaching course, in terms of incorporating particular knowledge or skills, valuing or displaying certain professional behaviors, and gaining self-awareness and satisfaction from teaching experiences. The findings of this study, specifically major themes from self-assessment narratives, provide us with a better understanding of medical students' developing identities and emerging professional self-concept as educators, specifically as experienced through a combination of formal teaching, and applying education theories and strategies. Findings may be informative from a program evaluation lens but also for faculty development initiatives related to training medical teachers and the larger landscape of the emerging field of Health Professions Education.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Medical-students-as-teachers; evaluation; medical teaching; self-assessment; teaching electives

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28497991     DOI: 10.1080/10401334.2017.1302801

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Teach Learn Med        ISSN: 1040-1334            Impact factor:   2.414


  5 in total

1.  Characteristics of academic medicine change agents as revealed by 4th-year medical students' reflections-on-practice.

Authors:  David Green; Gauri Agarwal; Daniel M Lichtstein; Chase B Knickerbocker; Michael Maguire; Gabriel E Shaya
Journal:  Med Sci Educ       Date:  2022-01-27

2.  Evaluating Effectiveness of Faculty and Near-Peer Delivered Teaching and Communication Skills Training.

Authors:  Victoria C Lucia; Rose Wedemeyer
Journal:  Med Sci Educ       Date:  2021-04-02

3.  Dreyfus scale-based feedback increases the medical student's satisfaction with the complex cluster part of the interviewing and physical examination course and skills' readiness in Taiwan.

Authors:  Shiau-Shian Huang; Chia-Chang Huang; Ying-Ying Yang; Shuu-Jiun Wang; Boaz Shulruf; Chen-Huan Chen
Journal:  J Educ Eval Health Prof       Date:  2019-10-11

4.  Developing the next generation of medical educators: assessing the impact of a clinical teaching elective offered to senior medical students.

Authors:  Karima Khamisa; Ilan A Fellus; Olga O Fellus; Warren J Cheung; Melissa Rousseau
Journal:  Int J Med Educ       Date:  2022-03-07

5.  The global variation of medical student engagement in teaching: Implications for medical electives.

Authors:  Rhys D Wenlock; Michael F Bath; Tom Bashford; Katharina Kohler; Peter J Hutchinson
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-02-24       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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