Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning

Because healthcare knowledge, practices and systems change so rapidly, physicians-in-training need to develop skills related to lifelong learning. The adult learning paradigm defines the effective professional learner as autonomous and activated. A part of the residency’s p4 (Preparing the Personal...

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Main Authors: Elissa Foster, Nicole Defenbaugh, Susan E. Hansen, Nyann Biery, Julie Dostal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2017-12-01
Series:Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/qrmh/article/view/6944
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spelling doaj-1aca3a9e3867403fa633af7d1b700f502020-11-25T03:15:41ZengPAGEPress PublicationsQualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare2532-20442017-12-011310.4081/qrmh.2017.6944Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learningElissa Foster0Nicole Defenbaugh1Susan E. Hansen2Nyann Biery3Julie Dostal4DePaul University College of Communication, Chicago, ILClinical Communication Educator, Allentown, PALehigh Valley Health Network Department of Family Medicine, Allentown, PALehigh Valley Health Network Department of Family Medicine, Allentown, PALehigh Valley Health Network Department of Family Medicine, Allentown, PA; Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Allentown, PABecause healthcare knowledge, practices and systems change so rapidly, physicians-in-training need to develop skills related to lifelong learning. The adult learning paradigm defines the effective professional learner as autonomous and activated. A part of the residency’s p4 (Preparing the Personal Physician for Practice) redesign, the RAFT (Resident Assessment Facilitation Team) process was designed to encourage residents’ adoption of activated learning behaviors by incorporating their participation in team-based educational planning and assessment of competence. This study examined interaction within the RAFT meetings to guage residents’ adoption of activated learning behaviors over time. In this study, transcripts of RAFT meetings from a single cohort of residents during the first and third years of training were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Teams of at least two analysts per transcript engaged in two rounds of descriptive coding and three levels of axial coding to examine interaction during the RAFT meetings and identify how that interaction was related to residents’ activated learning. Four categories of interaction were identified: advising, managing the process of the meeting, expressing and managing emotion, and demonstrating reflective practice and mindfulness. Across those categories, 36 sub-types of messages indicated both similarities and differences between first- and third-year residents. Specifically, third-year residents took a more active leadership role in meetings; faculty team members were more likely to hand over responsibility for problem solving to thirdyear residents. Integrating residents into the RAFT advising and assessment process provides a context for residents to practice and exhibit activated learning behaviors.https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/qrmh/article/view/6944advisingclinical competency committeeself-assessmentadult learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elissa Foster
Nicole Defenbaugh
Susan E. Hansen
Nyann Biery
Julie Dostal
spellingShingle Elissa Foster
Nicole Defenbaugh
Susan E. Hansen
Nyann Biery
Julie Dostal
Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning
Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
advising
clinical competency committee
self-assessment
adult learning
author_facet Elissa Foster
Nicole Defenbaugh
Susan E. Hansen
Nyann Biery
Julie Dostal
author_sort Elissa Foster
title Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning
title_short Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning
title_full Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning
title_fullStr Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning
title_full_unstemmed Resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning
title_sort resident assessment facilitation team: collaborative support for activated learning
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
issn 2532-2044
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Because healthcare knowledge, practices and systems change so rapidly, physicians-in-training need to develop skills related to lifelong learning. The adult learning paradigm defines the effective professional learner as autonomous and activated. A part of the residency’s p4 (Preparing the Personal Physician for Practice) redesign, the RAFT (Resident Assessment Facilitation Team) process was designed to encourage residents’ adoption of activated learning behaviors by incorporating their participation in team-based educational planning and assessment of competence. This study examined interaction within the RAFT meetings to guage residents’ adoption of activated learning behaviors over time. In this study, transcripts of RAFT meetings from a single cohort of residents during the first and third years of training were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Teams of at least two analysts per transcript engaged in two rounds of descriptive coding and three levels of axial coding to examine interaction during the RAFT meetings and identify how that interaction was related to residents’ activated learning. Four categories of interaction were identified: advising, managing the process of the meeting, expressing and managing emotion, and demonstrating reflective practice and mindfulness. Across those categories, 36 sub-types of messages indicated both similarities and differences between first- and third-year residents. Specifically, third-year residents took a more active leadership role in meetings; faculty team members were more likely to hand over responsibility for problem solving to thirdyear residents. Integrating residents into the RAFT advising and assessment process provides a context for residents to practice and exhibit activated learning behaviors.
topic advising
clinical competency committee
self-assessment
adult learning
url https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/qrmh/article/view/6944
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