Hunt D D, Carline J, Tonesk X, Yergan J, Siever M, Loebel J P
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
Med Educ. 1989 Jan;23(1):14-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.1989.tb00806.x.
The teachers who play the all-important role of enabling students to learn on clinical clerkships must balance the two essential skills of being a good role model and maintaining objectivity in order to identify students with a variety of problems. This study describes the findings of a survey that identifies both the type of the problems that most bother teachers and the relative frequency of those problems. Non-cognitive problems (poor interpersonal skills and non-assertive, shy students) were identified by teachers as being seen at the same relative frequency but posing greater difficulty than cognitive problems (poor integration skills, disorganization, poor fund of knowledge, etc.). A variety of the types of interventions to these problems are discussed.