Context
Academic hospital physicians strive to balance patient care with clinical teaching and team management. Individual styles differ, but the following are some common strategies.
- The One Minute Preceptor
- Requires the teacher to involve the learner and provide immediate feedback.
- Does not require any special training for the learner.
- SNAPPS
- Requires both the teacher and the learner to be familiar with the framework as it is more learner driven.
- Allows the learner more input in the teaching process.
One Minute Preceptor The preceptor does the following: |
SNAPPS The learner does the following: |
1. Gets a commitment from the learner |
1. Summarizes briefly the history and findings |
2. Probes for supporting evidence |
2. Narrows the differential to 2 or 3 possibilities |
3. Provides general rules |
3. Analyzes the differential by comparing/contrasting the possibilities |
4. Reinforces what was done correctly |
4. Probes the preceptor by asking questions |
5. Corrects mistakes |
5. Plans management for the patient’s medical issues |
|
6. Selects a case-related issue for self-directed learning |
Plan Ahead
Most effective teaching and management does not happen spontaneously.
- Day 1: establish expectations and priorities for medical students and housestaff, especially:
- Patient care priorities.
- Work rounds and attending rounds logistics.
- Specifics of oral presentations (level of detail, length, references to current literature).
- Scheduling issues (call nights, clinics, and days off).
- Process for feedback and evaluation.
- Specific learning and teaching goals for individuals and the team.
- Every day
- Identify learning opportunities by taking time before rounds (or the night before) to review patients and possible teaching topics.
- Identify patients who will require more time for discussion either due to complexity (e.g. ICU patients) and identify patients that may need to be discussed sooner to expedite hospital discharge.
- Schedule formal teaching (e.g., attending rounds, work rounds, student presentations).
Ward Teaching
Highly rated teachers are enthusiastic, flexible, and teach within clinical context.
- Teaching files: it is never too early to develop or collect teaching files (e.g., pneumonia).
- Clearly identify the goals for instruction and summarize a few key teaching points at the end of every learning session.
- Bedside teaching can be time consuming, but almost uniformly preferred by students and models physical examination and patient interactions.
- Frequent, short, pertinent sessions are highly preferred to episodic long ones.
- Teach clinical reasoning, which can be as valuable as teaching clinical content. Use clinical cases, involvement of learners in decision-making, and explicit discussion of clinical reasoning.
- Turn “to-do’s” and mundane tasks into teachable moments.
- Take time with learners to reflect on family meetings, condolence cards, and adverse outcomes.
Feedback and Evaluation
- Learners respond best if feedback is immediate (e.g., after presentations), frequent (e.g., everyday or call cycle), and specific (i.e., more than “great job”).
- Schedule formal feedback and evaluation.
- An approach to giving effective feedback:
- Step 1: ask for self-reflection (e.g., “How do you think you’re doing?”).
- Step 2: focus on types of behaviors, not the person.
- Step 3: reinforce positive behaviors.
- Step 4: give specific feedback, use examples.
- Step 5: develop new goals and a plan for improvement.
Furney SL, Orsini AN, Orsetti KE, et al. Teaching the one-minute preceptor. A randomized controlled trial. J Gen Intern Med 2001;16:620-624.
Irby DM. Three exemplary models of case-based teaching. Acad Med 1994;69:947-953.
Neher JO, Stevens NG. The one-minute preceptor: Shaping the teaching conversation. Fam Med 2003;35:391-393.
Pascoe JM, et. al. Maximizing teaching on the wards: Review and application of the One-Minute Preceptor and SNAPPS models. J Hosp Med. 2015 Feb;10(2):125-30.
Wachter RM, Goldman L, Hollander H. Hospital Medicine, Second Edition. 2005: Chapter 11: Effective clinical teaching in the inpatient setting.