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FOUNDATIONS OF TEACHING AND LEARNING. Student As Learner and Teacher in Clinical Education. Student as a Learner. How Do You Learn?. How do you learn?. Definition of Learning: the process of gaining information, changing behavior, acquisition of new skills, and affective skils .
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FOUNDATIONS OF TEACHING AND LEARNING Student As Learner and Teacher in Clinical Education
Student as a Learner How Do You Learn?
How do you learn? • Definition of Learning: the process of gaining information, changing behavior, acquisition of new skills, and affective skils. • Process of Learning • Trial & Error • Conditioning • Imitation: pt. and PT • Experimental: theroize • Primarily Cognitive (need Affective and Psychomotor)
How do you learn? • Pedagogy vs Androgogy • First time learning • Didactic with responsibility on learner • Emotional Intelligence • Domains of Learning • Cognitive • Psychomotor • Affective • Learning Styles
Adult Learner –Is this you? • Independent • Prefers Participation • Seeks Relevance • Utilizes Past Experience • Problem Oriented • Open to Learning (Readiness) • Tolerates Ambiguity (More than one answer)
Objectives of the Module • Review Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities of ADCE, CCCE, CI • CI / Student Relationship • Communication Methods • Feedback Tools • Factors for Becoming a CI • Appreciate the Role of the CI • Consider Future Role as a CI
Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities Relevance • You are a current consumer • Make the most of your clinical education experiences • Understand how your performance will be evaluated • You are a future provider of clinical education
Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities “The Stage” • The Environment • What is present at the facility • Physical setting • Personnel (administrative, professional staff, support staff)
Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities“The Players” • Academic Coordinator of Clinical Education (ACCE) • Associate (Academic) Director for Clinical Education (ADCE) • Center Coordinator of Clinical Education (CCCE) • Clinical Instructor (CI) • Student
Definitions, Roles, ResponsibilitiesACCE/ADCE • Definition: • Person employed by the university whose primary concern is relating the students’ clinical education to the curriculum • Roles: • Administrator, educator, facilitator, coordinator, problem solver, decision maker
Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities ACCE/ADCE Responsibilities • Communicates between academic institution and clinical education sites • Clinical education program planning, implementation and assessment • Develops new clinical education sites • Provides clinical faculty development • Schedules clinical education affiliations • Manages student assignments to clinic • Monitors student progress
Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities ACCE/ADCE Responsibilities • Assists students and clinical faculty with problems • Individualizes clinical education for students as necessary • Develops remediation plans as necessary • Decides when students have satisfactorily completed clinical education
Definitions, Roles, ResponsibilitiesCCCE • Definition: • Person at each clinic site who coordinates and arranges the clinical education for the students and also the one who communicates with the ADCE and faculty at the school • Role: • Administrator, educator, coordinator, facilitator, problem solver, decision maker
Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities CCCE Responsibilities • Oversee the clinical education program at the facility • Serve as liaison between university and facility • Prepare CI(s) for their role • Communicate information to CI(s) • Facilitate student /CI communication • Assist the CI in problem solving • Update the clinical education program yearly • Stay current with developments in clinical education
Definitions, Roles, ResponsibilitiesCI • Definition: • Person who is responsible for the direct instruction and supervision of the student in the clinical education setting. • Role: • Clinical teacher, clinician, facilitator, coordinator, evaluator • Work under their license
Definitions, Roles, ResponsibilitiesCI Responsibilities • Plan meaningful learning experiences to promote student achievement of objectives • Supervise and evaluate the student • Be available to meet with the student for daily discussions • Meet with the CCCE primarily during terminal affiliations
Definitions, Roles, Responsibilities CI • Be vigilant of patient and student safety at all times • Develop a learning contract with the student if applicable • Work with the clinical education team (ADCE, CCCE, and student) if challenges arise • Take full responsibility for all patient care related actions of the student
Definitions, Roles, ResponsibilitiesStudent • Definition: • Learner…the person whose behavior is expected to change • Role: • Physical Therapist – Novist Clinician • Colleague • Teacher • Evaluator
Definitions, Roles, ResponsibilitiesStudent Responsibilities • Meet all general, specific, and personal objectives for the clinical experience • Perform all duties expected of a physical therapist with the degree of competence expected for the level of the course • Adhere to all departmental policies and procedures • Evaluate self, experience, CI, facility, and academic preparation
CI/STUDENT RELATIONSHIP • Observe • Assist • Team patient care • Supervised patient care • “Independent” patient care
CI/STUDENTCommunication • Orientation • Patient Planning • Feedback to students • Immediate – Daily – Weekly • Mid placement formative evaluation • Final placement summative evaluation • Feedback to CI(s) • Informal • Formal
CI/STUDENTCommunication • Constructive Criticism • Appropriate Non-verbals • Setting expectations • Admitting weaknesses • Self assessment • Conflict Resolution • Ownership/Solutions • Initiation
CI/STUDENTCommunication KEY TO SUCCESS: COMMUNICATION!!!!!
Effective Communication • Active listening • Clarifying intent of communication and thus conveying meaning • Assertiveness versus aggressiveness
Professional Boundaries (Purtillo)To main communication on a professional basis • Cliche conversation • Very general • Almost nothing personal • “TMI” • Personal ideas & judgment • May be offensive • Feelings & emotions • Professional maintain emotions to the best of their ability • Peak communication • Right place, right time
CI/STUDENTFeedback Tools to Assist Communication • APTA Code of Conduct • Generic Abilities • APTA Core Values • Clinical Performance Instrument (CPI) – Entry Level • 3. Demonstrated professional behavior during interactions with others • 6. Communicates in ways that are congruent with situational needs • 15. Educates others (pt, family, caregivers, staff, students, other HCW) using relevant and effective teaching methods
CI/STUDENTFeedback to the UniversityTo Assist Communication • Surveys • Exit interviews • Site visits • Individual student performance evals • Community Advisory Committee • Informal from colleagues
Interactions with CI/Student • Appropriate professional boundaries • See previous slide • Addressing CI, patients, staff • Title • Formality • Roles
Role as Student During Clinical Education Experiences • Clarifying expectations with clinical instructor • Goals and objectives • Culture of clinical setting • Expectations of clinical instructor • Dealing with differences between student and clinical instructor • Feedback • Constructive
CI CHARACTERISTICSStudents’ Perspective • Good clinician • Collegial • Good communicator • Informs student of expectations • Open to student’s ideas • Is organized • Gives frequent feedback (both + & -) • Good sense of humor • Good teacher • Lets student “try their wings”
CI CHARACTERISTICSClinicians’ Perspective • Enthusiastic • Good sense of humor • Challenges in supportive way • Gives feedback (both + & -) • Excellent clinical skills • Takes time with the student • Negotiates supervision with student • Orients student to facility and community • Considers students’ needs and expectations
Appreciate the Role of the CI • Welcomes you into their facility • Fear of not giving the student what they need • Fear of conflict • Longer hours, more work and NO PAY • Fear of the unknown • May not live up to students’ expectations
Why would anyone want to become a CI?
Appreciate the Role of the CIWhy take a student? • Enhances your learning • Gives new perspective on field of PT • Sharing information • Indirect Physical Therapy • Gratification to know you had an integral part of developing a future physical therapist • Networking
STUDENT AS A CLINICAL TEACHER How do you know you are ready? • Experience • Capacity • Interest • Credibility • Availability • Ability to assess the performance of others • Capable of occasional difficulty conversations APTA Website: CI Self Assessment
Case #1 • At midterm, student is told they use the cell phone too often, chew gum during patient care, don’t come prepared with homework (look up medical diagnoses of pt case’s for next day) • What T & L principles could have been use to facilitate the learning – and in the long term plan, the outcome?
Case #2 • The student has been identified as not being able to measure ROM of peripheral joints when the patient is in modified positions from standard position, cannot remember MMT positions and resistance, and does not recall special tests for orthopedic pt populations. • What T & L principles could have been use to facilitate the learning – and in the long term plan, the outcome?
Case #3 • The CI has reviewed definitions of physical assistance with the student numerous times. The student keeps mixing up the definitions during documentation. • What T & L principles could have been use to facilitate the learning – and in the long term plan, the outcome?
Case #4 • The student is in the acute care setting and keeps missing important orders that are precautions or contraindications for the physical therapy examination and/or intervention. • What T & L principles could have been use to facilitate the learning – and in the long term plan, the outcome?