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Clinical supervision training across contexts
Author(s) -
Tai Joanna,
Bearman Margaret,
Edouard Vicki,
Kent Fiona,
Nestel Debra,
Molloy Elizabeth
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the clinical teacher
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.354
H-Index - 26
eISSN - 1743-498X
pISSN - 1743-4971
DOI - 10.1111/tct.12432
Subject(s) - context (archaeology) , medical education , faculty development , psychology , health care , medicine , professional development , nursing , paleontology , economics , biology , economic growth
Summary Background Clinicians require specific skills to teach or supervise students in the workplace; however, there are barriers to accessing faculty member development, such as time, cost and suitability. The Clinical Supervision Support Across Contexts (Clin SSAC ) programme was designed to provide accessible interprofessional educator training to clinical supervisors across a wide range of clinical settings. Context In Australia there are increasing numbers of health care students, creating pressure on existing placements. Students are now increasingly learning in community settings, where clinicians have traditionally had less access to faculty member development. Innovation An interprofessional team collaborated in the development and implementation of Clin SSAC . A total of 978 clinicians participated in a face‐to‐face, interactive, introductory module to clinical supervision; 672 people accessed the equivalent online core module, with 23 per cent completing all activities. Additional profession‐and discipline‐specific modules were also developed. Implications Formal project evaluation found that most participants rated the workshops as helpful or very helpful for their roles as clinical supervisors. Interdisciplinary learning from the workshops was reported to enable cross‐discipline supervision. Large participant numbers and favourable ratings indicate a continuing need for basic training in education. Key factors to workshop success included expert facilitators, the interprofessional context and interactive model. The online modules were an important adjunct, and provided context‐specific resources, but the low online completion rate suggests protected face‐to‐face time for faculty member development is still required. Programmes such as Clin SSAC have the capacity to promote interprofessional education and practice. There are barriers to accessing faculty member development, such as time, cost and suitability