Residents need better teaching skills, UCI survey says
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Deirdre Newman
A new survey released by a researcher at UC Irvine shows medical
residents, who spend a lot of time teaching medical students, are not
getting sufficient teacher training.
The survey, released Sunday, shows that 75% of residency program
directors in six medical specialties believe their residents need more
formal training in teacher skills, said Dr. Elizabeth Morrison, assistant
clinical professor of family medicine.
Residents are physicians who have finished medical school and are
going through paid training programs to allow them to practice in their
chosen specialties.
The training is essential, Morrison says, because residents provide a
lot of role modeling and hands-on training to students that more senior
physicians aren’t giving.
“This training is important not only to help medical students learn
their core clinical education, but also to help residents develop
teaching and communication skills that will assist them with patient
education.”
However, one local medical resident doesn’t see the relevance of more
formal teacher education because he says most medical training is not
imparted in a classroom where traditional teaching methods are required.
“It occurs by ongoing experience and shared experiences between the
patients they see,” said Mark Mendoza, a resident at UCI Medical Center.
The UCI survey is the most recent since 1993 and the first to analyze
the use of teacher training in specialties like surgery, obstetrics,
gynecology, psychiatry and pediatrics.
The survey found that 55% of medical education leaders surveyed said
their school offered some kind of formal teacher training for residents.
Even at the schools that do not offer training, most directors indicated
that it is only because they do not have the financial resources to do
so, Morrison said.
Mendoza said the only training he thinks would be beneficial for
residents is to give them tips on how to monitor their students’ progress
and comprehension.
“The way it’s usually done is the resident tells the medical student,
‘this is how it is,”’ Mendoza said. “It’s kind of nice if the resident
gets formal training on doing a follow-up to see if [the students]
understand.”
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