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Beyond ‘spray on’ professional development: Enhancing supervision in a tertiary teaching hospital

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-20, 03:48 authored by Tim ClementTim Clement, J Lysk, B Vaughan, R Zordan, J Murphy, J Tse, F McKinnon, E Molloy
AbstractBackgroundShort ‘programmes’ of professional development can have limited impact on clinical supervisors' practices. This paper reports on an innovative programme of professional development, implemented in a tertiary teaching hospital, that was designed to build clinical supervision capacity, improve the educational practice of frontline clinical supervisors and cultivate future educational leaders.ApproachThe programme was a partnership venture between St. Vincent's Hospital Melbourne and the University of Melbourne. It has a three‐tiered tapered design: a foundational self‐paced online course; online, interprofessional learning communities; and a Graduate Certificate in Clinical Education. Participants progressed from one tier to the next, with the largest number of employees participating in the primary tier (N = 112).EvaluationWe adopted a utilisation‐focused approach to evaluation, collecting multiple data sets across the tiers. Participants reported greater consciousness of their teaching practices, made changes to their practice, and the interprofessional learning communities allowed better integration of practical knowledge with the formal knowledge from the foundational course. Systemic outcomes included the creation of informal educator networks and the diffusion of ideas and practices within the hospital.ImplicationsManagers and clinical education leaders at the hospital concluded that funding this programme of professional development provided significant benefits, with a high return on investment, which may be transferable to other health care settings that place value on clinical education. For the outcomes to be sustainable, an ongoing programme of professional development needs to be built into the institution's fabric so that the resultant supervisory practices become strongly embedded in the organisational culture.

History

Journal

Clinical Teacher

Article number

e13838

Pagination

1-7

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1743-4971

eISSN

1743-498X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Wiley

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