| Literature DB >> 30276032 |
Anne Messman1, Sara M Kryzaniak2, Sylvia Alden3, Michael J Pasirstein4, Teresa M Chan5.
Abstract
Teaching junior residents, medical students and other hospital staff is an essential component of a resident physician's job. While resident physicians provide much of the teaching for their junior learners, few residents are provided with formal training on how to teach effectively. Although some Residents as Teachers (RAT) curricula do exist, there is no consensus on how the curriculum should be administered, content it should include, and how to assess its effectiveness. We seek to provide guidelines and recommendations applicable to any residency program seeking to begin or improve upon a RAT curriculum and provide suggestions on how to assess its effectiveness.Entities:
Keywords: curriculum development; graduate medical education; medical education; resident as teacher
Year: 2018 PMID: 30276032 PMCID: PMC6160295 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.3053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Open-access residents as teachers curricula.
| EMRA Handbook | The EMRA handbook is a PDF which provides some basic descriptions of teaching techniques and conceptual frameworks useful to beginning resident teachers. https://www.emra.org/uploadedfiles/emra/emra_publications/emra-2013residentaseducator-interactive.pdf |
| University of Virginia School of Medicine | This is a nice general curriculum which includes common mistakes and resident teaching cases. https://www.med- |
| University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine | This is an extensive Residents as Teachers curriculum complete with references for further reading. https://www.uab.edu/medicine/home/residents-fellows/current/cert |
| Academic Life in Emergency Medicine | This resource provides a ready-to-use curriculum for a one-month teaching elective as well as a Prezi presentation regarding teaching skills and an evaluation form to assess the resident teachers. https://www.aliem.com/2016/idea-series-asynchronous-curriculum-for-resident-as-teacher |
| University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine | This resource provides teaching modules in the form of slide presentations and includes a module on presentation skills. http://med.unr.edu/gme/current-residents/rats |
Curriculum components for a Residents as Teachers (RAT) curriculum.
SPIT: Serious, Probable, Interesting, Treatable
SNAPPS: Summarize, Narrow, Analyze, Probe, Plan, Select
5Cs: Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, Communities
PIQUED: Preparation, Identification, Questions, Urgency, Educational Modifications, Debrief
RAPID: Resuscitation, Analgesia, Patient needs, Intervention, Disposition
| Teaching Methods | Clinical Supervision of Junior Learners in the Emergency Department | Educational Leadership Skills |
| Case-based teaching (SPIT, SNAPPS, Aunt Minnie, Questioning) [ | Orienting learners | Leading teams |
| Bedside teaching | Communication skills | Role modeling |
| One-minute preceptor, also known as 5-Step Microskill [ | Presentation skills | Time management |
| Procedural skill teaching | Teaching consultation skills (5Cs, PIQUED) [ | Assessment and evaluation |
| Small group teaching | RAPID mnemonic [ | Curriculum design |
| Large group teaching | Giving feedback | Simulation |
Figure 1Resident teacher educational activity evaluation form.
PGY: Post-Graduate Year
NA: Not Applicable