Department of Child Health, Royal Free Hospital, London NW3 2QG, UK
Correspondence to: B W Lloyd E-mail: b.lloyd{at}medsch.ucl.ac.uk
| SUMMARY |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Design A questionnaire study.
Setting The North Thames Deanery, UK.
Participants 129 year 3, 4 or 5 paediatric specialist registrars in the North Thames Deanery.
Main outcome measures Reported value of educational supervision on a Likert scale; what elements of educational supervision were reported to be most useful; what elements of educational supervision were reported to be done poorly; what advice would specialist registrars give to a consultant who wanted to be a more effective educational supervisor.
Results 86/129 specialist registrars responded (67%). The mean score on the Likert scale (0-a complete waste of time; 100-excellent) was 57 with 37% of respondents giving a score of less than 50. The most valued aspects of educational supervision were: feedback on performance—cited by 50 respondents (56% of respondents); career advice—cited by 43 (48%); objective setting—cited by 36 (40%); pastoral support—cited by 25 (28%). Aspects of educational supervision that were reported to be often not done well were: commitment to educational supervision—cited by 44 respondents (49% of respondents); ensuring sessions are bleep-free—cited by 43 (48%); listening rather than talking—cited by 23 (26%); being encouraging—cited by 18 (20%). Advice to consultants about how to improve educational supervision included: listen rather than talk; be encouraging; treat the trainee as an individual with individual needs.
Conclusions We can find no other study of trainees' views about how educational supervision can be improved. Although some trainees found educational supervision very valuable, many did not. Educational supervision should only be carried out by consultants who are committed to the task. An educational supervisor should listen carefully in order to understand the trainee's individual ambitions and needs, should provide specific feedback on performance and should be encouraging.
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Doctors in training were rarely offered educational supervision before the 1990s. However, educational supervision became a mandatory part of the training of specialist registrars in the UK in the mid 1990s3 and continues to be viewed as a central part of the training of all doctors in the UK.4 We have, however, noticed that both trainees and consultants often regard educational supervision as being an unwelcome and bureaucratic requirement rather than as being a useful process.
Our study had two aims:
We used a questionnaire to determine the views of a group of experienced paediatric specialist registrars in the North Thames region in the UK. We have been unable to find any other study which has sought the views of trainees about how the process of educational supervision can be improved.
| METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The preprinted options for responding to questions two and three (see below) represented common responses obtained from a previous similar survey we carried out in 1999 (unpublished data).
The questionnaire
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
What did the respondents find most helpful in educational supervision?
The numbers of the 89 respondents who ticked the boxes alongside the four
preprinted suggestions were as follows:
There were relatively few free text comments and only one idea was cited as being helpful by more than two respondents—non-clinical advice (cited by five respondents). Examples of such non-clinical advice included getting an article published, interview skills and advice on CV presentation and job applications.
What did the respondents report was not done well by educational supervisors?
The numbers (percentages) of the 89 respondents who ticked the boxes
alongside the four preprinted suggestions were as follows:
Ideas expressed by more than two respondents via free text comments were (in order):
Two respondents complained that consultants seemed unsympathetic to life stresses outside work. Two other respondents complained that the consultants seemed uninterested in educational supervision.
What advice was offered to consultants wanting to improve their educational supervision?
This was the question that provoked the most responses in the form of free
text, summarized in Box 1. Box 2 lists some direct quotes from trainees in
response to this question, and in response to the other three questions in our
questionnaire.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The most important elements of educational supervision were considered to be the provision of constructive feedback, career advice and help with setting objectives. Suggestions about how to improve educational supervision included recognizing the importance of: listening rather than talking; treating the trainee as someone with individual needs; being encouraging.
Strengths of our study included the fact that we surveyed all the year 3-5 paediatric specialist registrars in a defined geographic area. Our questions were few and simple. We emphasized that participation in the survey was anonymous. We believe that this anonymity encouraged respondents to tell the truth about their feelings and experiences.
We were unable to find any comparable studies and therefore designed our own questionnaire. Our choice of the specific aspects of educational supervision that we investigated was informed by the results of a previous similar, unpublished, survey which was carried out by one of us (BL) in 1999. Our questionnaire encouraged our respondents to write free text, which they did (Boxes 1 and 2).
Shortcomings of our study include the fact that the study was relatively small and concerned trainees in one area of the UK. We consider that the response rate of 67% was reasonable for a study of this kind and was lower than it would otherwise have been because the steps we took to ensure anonymity precluded us sending specific reminders to non-responders. It seems unlikely that enthusiasts for educational supervision were over-represented among the non-responders.
| Box 1 Advice offered to a hypothetical consultant wanting to be
a more effective educational supervisor (number of respondents citing this
advice)
|
There have been many other surveys of trainees' opinions of their training.5 However, we have been able to find just two studies that have specifically concerned trainees' views of their educational supervision.6,7
One of these studies was of 21 specialist registrars (and 43 consultants) in occupational medicine in the Armed Forces.6 The authors reported that the trainees and consultants were in broad agreement about the purpose and most important elements of educational supervision: monitor SpR progress, support to SpR and identify SpR problems. The other study, of 103 senior house officers in psychiatry, rated regular appraisal and assessment of skills and deficits as the most important role of the educational supervisor.7 Neither of these two studies was as detailed about the practicalities of educational supervision as our study was and neither study investigated how the trainees thought that the process could be improved.
| Box 2 Some quotes from trainees about educational
supervision
|
In our study, advice for improving educational supervision was provided by trainees working in just one part of the UK. Nevertheless, it is our view that their advice may prove useful for trainers working in other specialities and in other places. The trainees in our study were relatively senior. Thus not all our findings are likely to be generalizable to more junior trainees.
We consider that there can be few educational supervisors who would not be interested in Boxes 1 and 2. We were struck by the observation that one of the most commonly cited pieces of advice to consultants was to listen, given the central role of listening in most consultants' view of how medicine should be practiced.
An important conclusion that could be drawn from our study by postgraduate deans and others involved in organizing training programs is that only consultants committed to the task of educational supervision should carry it out. As one trainee succinctly put it When done well, educational supervision is motivating and inspiring. When done badly it is the opposite.
| Footnotes |
|---|
Contributorship BL had the idea for this research. BL and DB designed the questionnaire and analysed the data. BL wrote the paper.
Acknowledgments We are grateful to Keith McKay and staff at the North Thames Deanery for sending out the questionnaires and electronic reminders.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Related articles in JRSM:
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||