PMID: 8949555May 1, 1996Paper

Teaching the teachers--a needs assessment of tutors for a new clinical skills course

Medical Education
L A RobinsonD E Neal

Abstract

There is an increasing trend in undergraduate education towards teaching clinical skills from a community base. A new clinical curriculum was introduced in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1995, beginning with an integrated clinical skills course. Although the attitudes and views of general practitioners (GPs) towards community-based clinical teaching have previously been reported, their perceived training needs have not been formally identified. The aims of this study were to identify the competencies needed by GPs for community-based clinical skills teaching, to compare and contrast these needs with their hospital colleagues, and to use the results to develop a teaching programme for the clinical tutors involved in the new course. In order of priority, the GPs and hospital tutors expressed similar needs: small-group teaching skills, assessing student needs, giving effective feedback and assessment of student performance, with a preference for the teaching to be organized within local teaching units. Most GPs and hospital tutors (73 and 69%, respectively) requested a distance-learning pack to complement the teaching. General practitioners rated resources for improving their individual clinical skills more highly than their hospital coll...Continue Reading

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Citations

Sep 14, 2001·Medical Education·A C HafflingB Hagander
Oct 13, 2001·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·M R NendazN V Vu

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