Henzi David, Davis Elaine, Jasinevicius Roma, Hendricson William
Division of Educational Research and Development, Department of Academic Information Services, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 78229-3900, USA.
J Dent Educ. 2006 Apr;70(4):361-77.
Many North American dental schools face the challenge of replacing the majority of their "boomer generation" clinical instructors over the next ten years as this cohort of faculty reaches retirement age. Developing a new cadre of clinical instructors poses a substantial faculty development challenge: what instructional techniques should be integrated into routine educational practice by the dental faculty of the future, and what aspects of the clinical learning environment should be addressed to improve the overall quality of the experience for patients, students, and the new cohort of instructors? To gain insight that might guide faculty development for new clinical instructors and enhance understanding of the learning environment in dental school clinics, this study addressed the following question: what are dental students' perceptions of their learning experiences in the clinical setting? The purpose of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the clinical instruction from the perspectives of the actual "consumer" of dental education: the student. This consumers' perspective was provided by 655 junior, senior, and graduate dental students at twenty-one North American dental schools who completed the Clinical Education Instructional Quality Questionnaire (ClinEd IQ) in 2003-04. The ClinED IQ examines four components of students' clinical experiences: 1) clinical learning opportunities, 2) involvement in specific learning activities, 3) interaction with clinical instructors, and 4) personal perceptions about clinical education. With the exception of inconsistent feedback and instruction and lack of continuous contact with the same instructors, juniors, seniors, and graduate students rated their interaction with clinical instructors favorably (mean=4.76 on a 6.00 scale), but provided lower ratings for clinical learning opportunities (mean=4.26 on a 6.00 scale) due to concerns about the efficiency of the dental clinic environment and lack of opportunity to treat patients in a variety of clinical settings. Analysis of more than 1,000 written comments provided by these students indicated four areas of concern: 1) inconsistent and sometimes insensitive (patronizing, rude) feedback from faculty; 2) excessive amounts of noneducational "legwork" such as billing, patient scheduling, phone calling, completing paperwork, and performing other clinic operations tasks; 3) limited access to faculty because of insufficient numbers of instructors on the clinic floor or difficulty locating faculty when they were needed for coaching, work evaluation, and chart signatures; and 4) concerns about the strategies employed to meet procedural requirements that some students saw as ethically questionable. Junior, senior, and graduate dental students at twenty-one North American dental schools perceived that the strongest aspect of their clinical education was their relationship with the faculty, but also reported that the dental school clinic was often an inefficient learning environment that hindered their opportunity to develop clinical competency. Students also sensed that faculty shortages, a growing crisis for dental education, hindered their progress in the clinic and made learning less efficient.
在未来十年,许多北美牙科学院面临着一项挑战,即随着这一批临床教师达到退休年龄,要替换大部分“婴儿潮一代”的临床教师。培养一批新的临床教师带来了重大的教师发展挑战:未来的牙科教师应将哪些教学技巧融入日常教育实践中,以及应解决临床学习环境的哪些方面,以提高患者、学生和新一批教师的整体体验质量?为了获得可能指导新临床教师的教师发展并增进对牙科学院诊所学习环境理解的见解,本研究提出了以下问题:牙科学生对他们在临床环境中的学习经历有何看法?该研究的目的是从牙科教育的实际“消费者”即学生的角度评估临床教学的有效性。这一消费者视角由北美21所牙科学院的655名本科、高年级和研究生牙科学生提供,他们在2003 - 2004年完成了临床教育教学质量问卷(ClinEd IQ)。ClinEd IQ考察了学生临床经历的四个组成部分:1)临床学习机会;2)参与特定学习活动;3)与临床教师的互动;4)对临床教育的个人看法。除了反馈和指导不一致以及与同一位教师缺乏持续接触外,本科、高年级和研究生对他们与临床教师的互动评价良好(6分制下平均分为4.76),但对临床学习机会的评价较低(6分制下平均分为4.26),原因是担心牙科诊所环境的效率以及缺乏在各种临床环境中治疗患者的机会。对这些学生提供的1000多条书面评论的分析表明了四个令人担忧的领域:1)教师反馈不一致,有时还不敏感(屈尊俯就、粗鲁);2)大量非教育性的“跑腿工作”,如计费、安排患者就诊、打电话、填写文书工作以及执行其他诊所运营任务;3)由于诊所楼层教师数量不足或在需要教师进行指导、工作评估和签字时难以找到他们,导致与教师接触受限;4)对为满足程序要求所采用的策略表示担忧,一些学生认为这些策略在道德上存在问题。北美21所牙科学院的本科、高年级和研究生牙科学生认为他们临床教育中最有力的方面是他们与教师的关系,但也报告称牙科学院诊所往往是一个低效的学习环境,阻碍了他们培养临床能力的机会。学生们还感觉到教师短缺这一牙科教育日益严重的危机阻碍了他们在诊所的进步,降低了学习效率。