| Literature DB >> 30643611 |
Jaime Jordan1,2, Michele L Dorfsman3, Mary Jo Wagner4,5, Stephen J Wolf6,7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Didactic lectures remain fundamental in academic medicine; however, many faculty physicians do not receive formal training in instructional delivery. In order to design a program to instill and enhance lecture skills in academic emergency medicine (EM) physicians we must first understand the gap between the current and ideal states.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30643611 PMCID: PMC6324694 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2018.9.39416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Results of qualitative analysis regarding strengths and weaknesses of physician lecturers.
| Theme | Subtheme | Number of comments | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Factors pertaining to the lecturer | Self-perception | 12 | “I generally consider myself to be an above average speaker.” |
| Preparation and knowledge | 11 | “Seems to go well when I am well prepared, have in-depth knowledge of a subject, know my learners…” | |
| Speaking style | 11 | “Great command of language, cadence, and presence.” | |
| Factors pertaining to the audience/learner | Engagement | 16 | “…it opened with a personal story…so everyone’s attention was captured right away and I was able to form a connection with the audience.” |
| Relevance | 6 | “…the information resonated with people.” | |
| Large groups | 4 | “I would like to develop techniques to help me do better with larger groups.” | |
| Factors pertaining to content and delivery | Alignment with educational theory | 6 | “I try and focus on no more than 5 take-home points to keep the cognitive load manageable for the audience.” |
| Audio visual/supporting material | 7 | “I used minimal slides, all of which had little to no text, so the attention was on me.” | |
| Organization | 10 | “My lectures are well organized and present a central theme or story effectively.” | |
| Use of active learning techniques | 7 | “I try to use case-based methodology…” |
Results of qualitative analysis regarding prior feedback and desired mentorship.
| Theme | Subtheme | Number of comments | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prior feedback | |||
| Factors pertaining to the lecturer | Preparation and knowledge | 2 | “More advanced prep.” |
| Speaking Style | 3 | “My delivery may be too fast…or my speaking style may be too familiar.” | |
| Factors pertaining to the audience/learner | Engagement | 1 | “I also get the sense I could do more as far as really engaging or entertaining the audience.” |
| Factors pertaining to content and delivery | Audio visual/supporting material | 4 | “I recently did give a talk and tested my audio-visual equipment ahead of time and still had problems.” |
| Organization | 2 | “Constructive feedback: better organization” | |
| Areas of desired mentorship | |||
| Factors pertaining to the lecturer | Self-perception | 2 | “…to decrease my anxiety around giving talks…to be more comfortable speaking…Additionally, when I do receive feedback, I am working on how I interpret feedback and trying not to internalize and generalize negative feedback” |
| Speaking style | 8 | “…I really haven’t gotten much feedback on technical aspects like how clearly I speak, the rate of which I speak, or how effectively I use the room space. This would also be helpful to get feedback on.” | |
| Factors pertaining to the audience/learner | Engagement | 3 | “The big thing I want to work on is audience engagement…I could do more to draw the audience in….Are there ways in which I cannot just give a lecture but moderate an audience?” |
| Large groups | 2 | “I would like to improve my ability to give a talk, particularly in a formal, large group setting.” | |
| Factors pertaining to content and delivery | Audio visual/supporting material | 2 | “I would love feedback on my use of visual aids…” |
| Organization | 3 | “I would like to improve specific teaching skills, particularly scaffolding/sequencing my learning materials…” | |