Steinert Yvonne, Mann Karen, Centeno Angel, Dolmans Diana, Spencer John, Gelula Mark, Prideaux David
Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Med Teach. 2006 Sep;28(6):497-526. doi: 10.1080/01421590600902976.
Preparing healthcare professionals for teaching is regarded as essential to enhancing teaching effectiveness. Although many reports describe various faculty development interventions, there is a paucity of research demonstrating their effectiveness.
To synthesize the existing evidence that addresses the question: "What are the effects of faculty development interventions on the knowledge, attitudes and skills of teachers in medical education, and on the institutions in which they work?"
The search, covering the period 1980-2002, included three databases (Medline, ERIC and EMBASE) and used the keywords: staff development; in-service training; medical faculty; faculty training/development; continuing medical education. Manual searches were also conducted. Articles with a focus on faculty development to improve teaching effectiveness, targeting basic and clinical scientists, were reviewed. All study designs that included outcome data beyond participant satisfaction were accepted. From an initial 2777 abstracts, 53 papers met the review criteria. Data were extracted by six coders, using the standardized BEME coding sheet, adapted for our use. Two reviewers coded each study and coding differences were resolved through discussion. Data were synthesized using Kirkpatrick's four levels of educational outcomes. Findings were grouped by type of intervention and described according to levels of outcome. In addition, 8 high-quality studies were analysed in a 'focused picture'.
The majority of the interventions targeted practicing clinicians. All of the reports focused on teaching improvement and the interventions included workshops, seminar series, short courses, longitudinal programs and 'other interventions'. The study designs included 6 randomized controlled trials and 47 quasi-experimental studies, of which 31 used a pre-test-post-test design.
Despite methodological limitations, the faculty development literature tends to support the following outcomes: Overall satisfaction with faculty development programs was high. Participants consistently found programs acceptable, useful and relevant to their objectives. Participants reported positive changes in attitudes toward faculty development and teaching. Participants reported increased knowledge of educational principles and gains in teaching skills. Where formal tests of knowledge were used, significant gains were shown. Changes in teaching behavior were consistently reported by participants and were also detected by students. Changes in organizational practice and student learning were not frequently investigated. However, reported changes included greater educational involvement and establishment of collegiate networks. Key features of effective faculty development contributing to effectiveness included the use of experiential learning, provision of feedback, effective peer and colleague relationships, well-designed interventions following principles of teaching and learning, and the use of a diversity of educational methods within single interventions. Methodological issues: More rigorous designs and a greater use of qualitative and mixed methods are needed to capture the complexity of the interventions. Newer methods of performance-based assessment, utilizing diverse data sources, should be explored, and reliable and valid outcome measures should be developed. The maintenance of change over time should also be considered, as should process-oriented studies comparing different faculty development strategies.
Faculty development activities appear highly valued by participants, who also report changes in learning and behavior. Notwithstanding the methodological limitations in the literature, certain program characteristics appear to be consistently associated with effectiveness. Further research to explore these associations and document outcomes, at the individual and organizational level, is required.
让医护专业人员做好教学准备被视为提高教学效果的关键。尽管许多报告描述了各种教师发展干预措施,但缺乏研究证明其有效性。
综合现有证据,回答问题:“教师发展干预措施对医学教育教师的知识、态度和技能以及他们工作的机构有何影响?”
检索涵盖1980 - 2002年期间,包括三个数据库(医学索引数据库、教育资源信息中心数据库和荷兰医学文摘数据库),使用关键词:员工发展;在职培训;医学教师;教师培训/发展;继续医学教育。还进行了手工检索。对以提高教学效果为重点、针对基础和临床科学家的教师发展相关文章进行了综述。所有包含参与者满意度之外结果数据的研究设计均被接受。从最初的2777篇摘要中,53篇论文符合综述标准。由六名编码员使用为我们的研究改编的标准化BEME编码表提取数据。两名评审员对每项研究进行编码,编码差异通过讨论解决。使用柯克帕特里克教育成果的四个层次对数据进行综合分析。研究结果按干预类型分组,并根据成果层次进行描述。此外,对8项高质量研究进行了“聚焦分析”。
大多数干预措施针对在职临床医生。所有报告都聚焦于教学改进,干预措施包括工作坊、系列研讨会、短期课程、纵向项目和“其他干预措施”。研究设计包括6项随机对照试验和47项准实验研究,其中31项采用了前后测设计。
尽管存在方法学上的局限性,但教师发展相关文献倾向于支持以下结果:对教师发展项目的总体满意度较高。参与者一直认为这些项目是可接受的、有用的且与他们的目标相关。参与者报告称对教师发展和教学的态度有积极变化。参与者报告称对教育原则的了解有所增加,教学技能有所提高。在使用知识正式测试的情况下,显示出显著的进步。参与者一致报告了教学行为的变化,学生也察觉到了这些变化。组织实践和学生学习方面的变化未被频繁研究。然而,报告的变化包括更多的教育参与和学院网络的建立。有助于提高有效性的有效教师发展的关键特征包括使用体验式学习、提供反馈、有效的同行和同事关系、遵循教学原则精心设计的干预措施,以及在单一干预措施中使用多种教育方法。方法学问题:需要更严格的设计以及更多地使用定性和混合方法来把握干预措施的复杂性。应探索利用多种数据源的基于绩效评估的新方法,并开发可靠且有效的结果测量方法。还应考虑随着时间推移变化的维持情况,以及比较不同教师发展策略的以过程为导向的研究。
教师发展活动似乎受到参与者的高度重视,他们也报告了学习和行为方面的变化。尽管文献中存在方法学上的局限性,但某些项目特征似乎始终与有效性相关。需要进一步研究以探索这些关联,并记录个体和组织层面的结果。