a Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado Denver , Aurora , Colorado , USA.
b Department of Emergency Medicine, Brown University , Providence , Rhode Island , USA.
Teach Learn Med. 2019 Aug-Sep;31(4):424-433. doi: 10.1080/10401334.2018.1560298. Epub 2019 Jan 22.
For curriculum development purposes, this study examined how the development of residents as educators is reflected in the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Milestones. Residents teach patients, families, medical students, physicians, and other health professionals during and beyond their training. Despite this expectation, it is unclear how the development of residents as educators is reflected in the specialty-specific Milestones. We performed a textual content analysis of 25 specialty Milestone documents available as downloads from the ACGME website in December 2015. Syntactical units of interest included developmental progressions that describe the development of educators over the course of residency training and 16 key terms identified during the analysis. We then categorized the terms by associated Milestone level, ACGME core competency, and targeted learner(s). We identified 10 developmental progressions and 546 instances of the 16 key terms that describe the development of physician educators. The frequency of terms among specialties was quite variable (5-46 terms per specialty, = 21). The majority of education-related terms appeared at advanced Milestone levels; there were 139 (26%) such instances in Level 4 and 296 (54%) in Level 5. Education-related terms were identified in all six ACGME core competencies, with greatest frequency in Patient Care (157, 29%). Other residents were the learners most frequently targeted by education-related Milestones (211, 40%). The current ACGME Milestones largely imply that resident teaching is a high-level or aspirational goal, achieved without a clear or consistently assessed developmental progression. These findings run counter to the theoretical basis that underlies the development of the Milestones. Wide variation among specialties indicates lack of consensus around the ideal skill set of the resident educator and limits the utility of these documents for curriculum development in this domain.
为了课程开发的目的,本研究考察了住院医师教育者的发展如何反映在研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)的里程碑中。住院医师在培训期间和培训结束后向患者、家属、医学生、医生和其他卫生专业人员教授。尽管有这种期望,但住院医师作为教育者的发展如何反映在专业特定的里程碑中尚不清楚。我们对 2015 年 12 月从 ACGME 网站下载的 25 个专业里程碑文件进行了文本内容分析。感兴趣的句法单位包括描述住院医师培训过程中教育者发展的发展阶段以及在分析过程中确定的 16 个关键术语。然后,我们根据相关里程碑水平、ACGME 核心能力和目标学习者对术语进行分类。我们确定了 10 个发展阶段和 16 个关键术语中的 546 个实例,这些术语描述了医师教育者的发展。术语在专业之间的频率差异很大(每个专业 5-46 个术语,n=21)。大多数与教育相关的术语出现在高级里程碑水平;在第 4 级有 139 个(26%),在第 5 级有 296 个(54%)。与教育相关的术语在所有六个 ACGME 核心能力中都有出现,其中以患者护理(157,29%)出现的频率最高。其他住院医师是与教育相关的里程碑最常针对的学习者(211,40%)。目前的 ACGME 里程碑主要意味着住院医师教学是一个高级或理想的目标,没有明确或一致评估的发展阶段就无法实现。这些发现与构成里程碑基础的理论基础背道而驰。专业之间的差异很大,表明在住院医师教育者的理想技能方面缺乏共识,并限制了这些文件在这一领域课程开发中的实用性。