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积极教授主动教学技巧。

Actively Teaching Active Teaching Techniques.

作者信息

Walz Alice, Kane Ian

机构信息

Medical University of South Carolina, Division of Pediatric Critical Care, Charleston, SC.

Medical University of South Carolina, Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Charleston, SC.

出版信息

J Educ Teach Emerg Med. 2024 Oct 31;9(4):SG1-SG12. doi: 10.21980/J8H94V. eCollection 2024 Oct.

DOI:10.21980/J8H94V
PMID:39507470
原文链接:https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11537730/
Abstract

AUDIENCE

The target audience for this small group workshop are interns and residents of any specialty.

INTRODUCTION

All residents are expected to become proficient teachers in a variety of settings as they progress in training, and many residency programs offer advanced training or credentialing in medical education.1,2 Recently, some emergency medicine programs have also begun to offer a formal medical education fellowship. Traditional resident education has been in the form of didactic lectures such as morning report, noon conference, and Grand Rounds as well as small group bedside teaching by attendings. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in many cases these learning structures have been reengineered into a hybrid or virtual model.3 This new educational paradigm has spurred the search for best practice teaching methods across a variety of situations. 4 Active teaching, characterized by audience engagement and self-directed learning, has been shown to promote deeper understanding and improved knowledge retention when compared to standard didactic teaching.5,6Educational curricula for residents now acknowledge the importance of audience participation, with more emphasis on the use of interactive teaching techniques. A review of residents-as-teachers curricula highlighted the importance of disseminating practical resources for how to effectively teach residents to be better educators.7 However, in the literature there are few examples of how to teach residents to implement these best practice interactive teaching methods. We designed a simple, interactive, and easily reproducible workshop for introducing the concepts of active teaching to residents that allows for active engagement with these techniques.

EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES

By the end of this small group exercise, learners will be able to: 1) assess interactive teaching techniques that support learning in various environments; 2) incorporate active teaching techniques into a variety of real-world teaching scenarios; 3) implement selected techniques to enrich one's own teaching practice.

EDUCATIONAL METHODS

Our workshop was designed to include elements of gamification, which facilitates teamwork and competition and can be used to engage learners in higher levels of learning.8 We began by performing a literature search for descriptions of active teaching techniques that had been used in the medical setting.9-14 We developed a list of 15 popular active teaching strategies and created a one-page menu which briefly described each strategy. Utilizing the flipped classroom model, we identified three articles (references 10, 11, and 14) which reviewed active teaching techniques and sent these articles to our participants via email one week before our session with instructions to read the articles and come prepared to discuss them at our session. We created two sets of playing cards for our activity. The first set of playing cards was titled "teaching setting" and included common venues for teaching in clinical medicine: morning report, grand rounds warm-up (which at our institution consists of a 15-minute lecture given to a large audience in a formal setting), small group, bedside teaching, journal club, and an online/virtual lecture. The second set of playing cards included simulated audiences that could be present at a teaching session: peers (residents), medical students, attendings, or mixed audience. To account for larger groups of residents, we made multiple copies of each card within the respective card set.At the beginning of the workshop, the learning objectives were discussed and the menu with the 15 active teaching techniques was reviewed along with the assigned pre-reading articles. Residents were asked to name different active teaching techniques and give examples they experienced during their residency or medical school education. Participants (pediatric and medicine-pediatric residents) were then placed in groups of three or four, and each group drew one teaching setting card and one audience card. All groups were given the same general topic (diabetic ketoacidosis) and each group was challenged to design a short teaching activity relevant to the topic that incorporated active teaching techniques appropriate for their setting and audience. After a short period of planning, each group reported how they would teach the topic and which active teaching strategies they would use. After each group described their approach, they received peer feedback from the other groups' participants. Key aspects of the proposed active teaching techniques and any barriers to implementation were discussed. The cards were then reshuffled for each group, and the exercise was repeated with a different general topic (in our session, we chose developmental milestones).

RESEARCH METHODS

Participants provided anonymous feedback in the form of surveys which assessed the efficacy of the workshop. Participants were also asked to commit to three active teaching techniques they would incorporate into teaching sessions within the next six months.

RESULTS

Our workshop was presented for two sequential years: 2022 and 2023. Our workshop was attended by 32 residents in year one and 36 residents in year two. All participants filled out the anonymous evaluation survey at the conclusion of the exercise. Eighty-five percent of respondents rated the session as "highly organized," and a majority strongly agreed that the workshop was effective for learning active teaching techniques (78%) and taught them concrete techniques that they could incorporate into their future teaching (88%). Participants reported that they were most likely to utilize Jigsaw (31 respondents), Polling/audience response (29 respondents), case-based learning (25 respondents), role play (24 respondents) and small group activities (20 respondents) into their next teaching session. In our second workshop, there were 19 participants who had also attended the first workshop. All 19 of these residents reported using at least one active teaching technique during the previous year, and over half reported using at least three of the techniques.

DISCUSSION

Participants reported high levels of satisfaction with the organization and efficacy of this workshop. The strategies of using sets of cards to randomize the process, adding time constraints, and having each group report their teaching plans increased overall participant interest and excitement in the workshop. Having all groups design teaching sessions using the same general topic was chosen intentionally to promote friendly competition and to allow for discussion among the groups about similarities and differences in the application of their chosen active teaching techniques. To apply our activity to other specialties, we recommend choosing general topics that are commonly encountered in that specialty; for example, the topic of "myocardial infarction" or "pediatric toxidromes" could be used for emergency medicine residents.

TOPICS

Active teaching, pediatrics, adult learning theory, graduate medical education, undergraduate medical education.

摘要

受众

本次小组研讨会的目标受众是任何专业的实习生和住院医师。

介绍

所有住院医师在培训过程中都应在各种环境中成为熟练的教师,许多住院医师培训项目都提供医学教育方面的高级培训或认证。1,2最近,一些急诊医学项目也开始提供正式的医学教育奖学金。传统的住院医师教育形式包括讲授式讲座,如早间汇报、午间会议和大查房,以及带教老师的小组床边教学。由于新冠疫情,在许多情况下,这些学习结构已被重新设计为混合或虚拟模式。3这种新的教育范式促使人们在各种情况下寻找最佳实践教学方法。4与标准讲授式教学相比,以受众参与和自主学习为特征的主动式教学已被证明能促进更深入的理解并提高知识保留率。5,6住院医师的教育课程现在认识到受众参与的重要性,更加强调使用互动教学技巧。一项对住院医师作为教师的课程的综述强调了传播实用资源以有效教导住院医师成为更好教育者的重要性。7然而,在文献中,很少有关于如何教导住院医师实施这些最佳实践互动教学方法的例子。我们设计了一个简单、互动且易于复制的研讨会,向住院医师介绍主动式教学的概念,让他们能够积极参与这些技巧。

教育目标

在本次小组练习结束时,学习者将能够:1)评估支持在各种环境中学习的互动教学技巧;2)将主动式教学技巧融入各种实际教学场景;3)实施选定的技巧以丰富自己的教学实践。

教育方法

我们的研讨会设计包含游戏化元素,这有助于团队合作和竞争,并可用于促使学习者进行更高层次的学习。8我们首先进行文献检索,以查找在医学环境中使用的主动式教学技巧的描述。9 - 14我们列出了15种流行的主动式教学策略,并创建了一个单页菜单,简要描述每种策略。利用翻转课堂模式,我们确定了三篇综述主动式教学技巧的文章(参考文献10、11和14),并在课程前一周通过电子邮件将这些文章发送给参与者,指示他们阅读文章并准备在课程中进行讨论。我们为活动创建了两组扑克牌。第一组扑克牌名为“教学场景”,包括临床医学教学的常见场所:早间汇报、大查房热身(在我们机构,这包括在正式环境中向大量受众进行的15分钟讲座)、小组教学、床边教学、期刊俱乐部以及在线/虚拟讲座。第二组扑克牌包括可能出现在教学环节的模拟受众:同行(住院医师)、医学生、带教老师或混合受众。为了容纳更多住院医师群体,我们在各自的牌组中对每张牌都制作了多份副本。在研讨会开始时,讨论了学习目标,并回顾了包含15种主动式教学技巧的菜单以及指定的预读文章。要求住院医师说出不同的主动式教学技巧,并给出他们在住院医师培训或医学院教育期间经历的示例。然后将参与者(儿科和儿内科住院医师)分成三到四人一组,每个小组抽取一张教学场景牌和一张受众牌。所有小组都被给定相同的一般主题(糖尿病酮症酸中毒),并被要求设计一个与该主题相关的简短教学活动,该活动要结合适合其场景和受众的主动式教学技巧。经过短暂的规划后,每个小组报告他们将如何教授该主题以及他们将使用哪些主动式教学策略。在每个小组描述其方法后,他们从其他小组的参与者那里获得同行反馈。讨论了所提议的主动式教学技巧的关键方面以及实施过程中的任何障碍。然后为每个小组重新洗牌,并用不同的一般主题(在我们的课程中,我们选择了发育里程碑)重复该练习。

研究方法

参与者以调查问卷的形式提供匿名反馈,评估研讨会的效果。还要求参与者承诺在接下来的六个月内将三种主动式教学技巧纳入教学环节。

结果

我们的研讨会连续举办了两年:2022年和2023年。第一年有32名住院医师参加我们的研讨会,第二年有36名住院医师参加。所有参与者在练习结束时都填写了匿名评估调查问卷。85%的受访者将该课程评为“组织非常好”,大多数人强烈同意该研讨会对于学习主动式教学技巧有效(78%),并教会了他们可以纳入未来教学的具体技巧(88%)。参与者报告说,他们最有可能在下次教学环节中采用拼图法(31名受访者)、投票/受众反应(29名受访者)、基于案例的学习(25名受访者)、角色扮演(24名受访者)和小组活动(20名受访者)。在我们的第二次研讨会中,有19名参与者也参加了第一次研讨会。所有这19名住院医师都报告说在上一年至少使用了一种主动式教学技巧,超过一半的人报告使用了至少三种技巧。

讨论

参与者对本次研讨会的组织和效果表示高度满意。使用扑克牌组随机化过程、增加时间限制以及让每个小组报告其教学计划的策略提高了参与者对研讨会的整体兴趣和兴奋度。故意让所有小组使用相同的一般主题设计教学环节,以促进友好竞争,并允许各小组讨论他们所选择的主动式教学技巧在应用中的异同。为了将我们的活动应用于其他专业,我们建议选择该专业中常见的一般主题;例如,“心肌梗死”或“儿科中毒综合征”等主题可用于急诊医学住院医师。

主题

主动式教学、儿科学、成人学习理论、毕业后医学教育、本科医学教育。

相似文献

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Active Teaching Techniques Using Virtual Didactics: Novel Experience From a National Neurosurgery Resident Course.采用虚拟教学的主动教学技巧:全国神经外科住院医师课程的全新体验。
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