Education Research: Guided Worksheets to Support Residents as Clinical Teachers in the Neurology Clerkship.
Clare McGarvey Lambert, Jeffrey Dewey
INTRODUCTION AND PROBLEM STATEMENT: Neurology residents are often tasked with incorporating impromptu medical student teaching into their clinical workflow, yet few resources exist that combine content and pedagogical guidance in an efficient format. Residents are also learning themselves and may experience anxiety around teaching, compounded by the additional cognitive load of identifying and addressing student learning needs. We developed a guided worksheet tool to make high-yield, effective clinical neurology teaching accessible to busy residents. OBJECTIVES: We piloted 4 self-guided worksheets on core neurology topics and examined student learning and the resident teaching experience. We aimed to (1) demonstrate successful student knowledge acquisition, retention, and satisfaction and (2) demonstrate improved resident teacher (RT) comfort, efficacy, and/or efficiency in clinical teaching on inpatient services. METHODS AND CURRICULUM DESIGN: Four worksheets were developed: ischemic stroke basics, reading magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, intracranial hemorrhage, and seizures. Residents were asked to guide students through filling out a partially blank version, using a completed 'master' version as a guide, while providing targeted teaching when knowledge gaps were apparent. Student learning was assessed using presession, postsession, and two-week postsession quizzes. Qualitative analysis was performed on semistructured interviews with RTs to understand their experience teaching with the tool. RESULTS AND ASSESSMENT DATA: Six RTs taught 27 medical students a total of 47 lessons. Learner knowledge scores improved immediately after lessons (1.24/3 ± 0.92 before lesson vs 2.75/3 ± 0.49 after lesson, DISCUSSION AND LESSONS LEARNED: Guided worksheets offer content and can support RTs in providing effective clinical teaching while improving their comfort and self-efficacy. Expansion of these tools to additional high-yield topics may offer further support for resident teaching in the clinical setting.
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