T.M. Chan is assistant professor, McMaster University, Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, program director, McMaster Clinician Educator Area of Focused Competency program, and adjunct scientist, McMaster Program for Education Research, Innovation, and Theory, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; and chief academic officer and member, Editorial Board, Academic Life in Emergency Medicine Faculty Incubator; ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6104-462X. M. Gottlieb is assistant professor and director of emergency ultrasound, Rush University Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, and chief operating officer, Academic Life in Emergency Medicine Faculty Incubator; ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3276-8375. J. Sherbino is associate professor, McMaster University, Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, and assistant dean, Education Research, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. R. Cooney is residency program director, Department of Emergency Medicine, Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, Pennsylvania. M. Boysen-Osborn is associate professor, vice chair of education, and residency program director, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine, Orange, California; ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6676-6429. A. Swaminathan is assistant professor, New York University, Department of Emergency Medicine, New York, New York, and editor-in-chief, Core EM blog. F. Ankel is vice president of health professions education, HealthPartners Institute, and professor of emergency medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota. He is also senior advisor, Academic Life in Emergency Medicine; ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7329-5095. L.M. Yarris is professor, Oregon Health Sciences University, Department of Emergency Medicine, Portland, Oregon, and chief strategic officer, Academic Life in Emergency Medicine Faculty Incubator; ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1277-2852.
Acad Med. 2018 Oct;93(10):1497-1502. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002309.
Early- and midcareer clinician educators often lack a local discipline-specific community of practice (CoP) that encourages scholarly activity. As a result, these faculty members may feel disconnected from other scholars.
Academic Life in Emergency Medicine (ALiEM) piloted the Faculty Incubator. This longitudinal, asynchronous, online curriculum focused on developing a virtual CoP among 30 early- to midcareer medical educators (the "incubatees"), 8 core faculty mentors, and 10 guest mentors. The yearlong curriculum included 12 monthly modules focusing on core concepts in medical education scholarship. The initiative connected the incubatees with a virtual community of peers and mentors, with whom they completed multiple scholarly projects, sought mentorship, and engaged professionally. The authors used an online, closed, social media platform (Slack) to facilitate the exchange of ideas.
In the inaugural year (March 2016-February 2017), the mentorship team facilitated exceptional levels of online engagement among incubatees. All participants (incubatees, core mentors, and guest mentors) shared 1,081 files and exchanged a total of 22,665 messages (approximately 62 per day). Of these, 3,036 (13.4%) were via open channels, 5,483 (24.2%) via small groups, and 14,146 (62.4%) via direct messages.
The ALiEM Faculty Incubator represents a proof of concept, and initial outcomes show that it is possible to engage an international group of early- to midcareer medical educators to create a vibrant online CoP. The Faculty Incubator leaders plan to determine whether this engaged group of health professions educators will increase their scholarly output as a result of this initiative.
处于职业生涯早期和中期的临床医师教育家通常缺乏鼓励学术活动的当地特定学科的实践社区 (CoP)。因此,这些教师可能会感到与其他学者脱节。
急诊医学学术生活 (ALiEM) 试行教师孵化器。这是一个纵向、异步、在线课程,专注于在 30 名处于职业生涯早期到中期的医学教育工作者(“孵化器”)、8 名核心教师导师和 10 名客座导师之间建立一个虚拟的 CoP。为期一年的课程包括 12 个每月模块,重点是医学教育奖学金的核心概念。该计划将孵化器与虚拟同行和导师社区联系起来,他们一起完成了多个学术项目,寻求指导,并进行专业交流。作者使用在线、封闭、社交媒体平台 (Slack) 促进思想交流。
在创始年(2016 年 3 月至 2017 年 2 月),导师团队促成了孵化器中极高水平的在线参与。所有参与者(孵化器、核心导师和客座导师)共分享了 1081 个文件,总共交换了 22665 条消息(每天约 62 条)。其中,3036 条(13.4%)通过开放渠道,5483 条(24.2%)通过小群组,14146 条(62.4%)通过直接消息。
ALiEM 教师孵化器代表了一个概念验证,初步结果表明,有可能吸引一群处于职业生涯早期到中期的国际医学教育工作者来创建一个充满活力的在线 CoP。教师孵化器的领导者计划确定这一积极参与的健康职业教育工作者群体是否会因这一举措而增加他们的学术成果。