Back to Search Start Over

A multisite randomized trial of implicit versus explicit modeling in clinical teaching

Authors :
Mel L, Anderson
Christine P, Beltran
Victoria, Harnik
Meredith, Atkins
Janet, Corral
Gino, Farina
Alice, Fornari
Marcelle, Hamburger
Scott, Holliday
Jeff, Manko
Katherine, Normand
Alisson, Ownby
Sheryl, Pfeil
Demicha, Rankin
Amy, Cohen
Richard M, Schwartzstein
Margaret M, Hayes
Katie, Normand
Source :
Medical teacher.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Faculty modeling of desired behaviors has historically been a part of the apprenticeship model of clinical teaching, yet little is known about best practices for modeling. This study compared the educational impact of implicitly versus explicitly modeled communication skills among U.S. medical students.Fourth-year medical students from six U.S. academic medical centers were randomly assigned one simulated clinical encounter in which faculty provided either implicit or explicit modeling of important communication skills. Outcomes were assessed by electronic surveys immediately before and after the simulations. Students were blinded to the purpose of the study.Students in the explicit arm were more likely to correctly cite two of the three key specific communication elements modeled by faculty: deliberate body position (53.3% vs. 18.6%,In a multi-center randomized trial, explicit faculty role-modeling led to greater uptake of communication knowledge, greater recognition of skills, and a greater sense that faculty expected these skills to be adopted by students. These results must be considered in the context, however, of a simulated environment and a short timeframe for assessing learning with students who volunteered for a simulated experience.

Details

ISSN :
1466187X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medical teacher
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........4b3e36513b0ee4b590fb1ec7bbcfa398