Doctoral Degrees (Centre for Health Professions Education)
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Browsing Doctoral Degrees (Centre for Health Professions Education) by Subject "Clinical teaching"
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- ItemClinical teaching on an expanding training platform : designing a fit-for-purpose faculty development framework for emerging clinical teachers in a resource-constrained environment(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2018-12) Blitz, Julia; Van Schalkwyk, Susan Camille; De Villiers, Marietjie René; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. Centre for Health Professions Education.ENGLISH SUMMARY: The research presented in this dissertation was catalysed by a preliminary phase of research which described the journey undertaken by specialist clinicians as they took on the role of clinical teacher. This gave rise to the question of how other clinicians might be assisted on a similar journey, particularly in the context of an under-resourced environment and an expanding clinical training platform. Training in the clinical environment forms a crucial part of medical curricula. Particularly in the later years of the curriculum, it is the component in which students may develop their identity as doctor. Clinicians involved in this phase play a crucial role in the training of medical students. Medical schools are needing to expand their clinical training platforms in order to provide opportunities for greater numbers of students, as well as to offer clinical training that covers the full spectrum of healthcare. In this expansion, medical schools have an obligation to maintain the quality of teaching in the clinical context. Faculty development is a means to strengthen such clinical teaching. In a resource-constrained environment, it is incumbent upon us to consider how best to design faculty development offerings for these emerging clinical teachers. This research was approached from an interpretivist stance, therefore qualitative methods were used. Based on Kern’s six step approach to curriculum development, the targeted needs of emerging clinical teachers were identified by using four different data sets to develop an understanding of current clinical teaching and strategies used to strengthen it. Senior medical students, clinical teachers and staff responsible for faculty development were interviewed and clinical teaching episodes were recorded. Each data set was analysed individually and thereafter all four sets of findings were synthesized and presented as the situational analysis. The findings informed the development of a fit-for-purpose faculty development framework for emerging clinical teachers. The outcome of the study is a fit-for-purpose faculty development framework that is based on four constituent elements. The first is that faculty development be situated within the network of clinical practice, involving not only individuals, but also their clinical practice community and their academic discipline. The second addresses clinical teaching as supervision; the offering of affordances. The third emphasises clinical learning as student engagement, with an essential interplay between the offering of affordances, and the development and exercising of student agency for engagement. The fourth is to tailor-make faculty development offerings that are informed by students’ evaluations of clinical teaching effectiveness. Learning in the workplace needs to be mirrored by teaching in the workplace. This fit-forpurpose framework is offered as a means to assist those responsible for faculty development to meaningfully assist clinicians on the journey to becoming confident clinical teachers.