gms | German Medical Science

GMS Journal for Medical Education

Gesellschaft für Medizinische Ausbildung (GMA)

ISSN 2366-5017

Focused didactic training for skills lab student tutors – which techniques are considered helpful?

Project medicine

  • Martin Heni - Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetology, Angiology, Nephrology and Clinical Chemistry, Tübingen, Germany; Member of the German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), Tübingen, Germany
  • Maria Lammerding-Köppel - Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Faculty of Medicine, The Competence Centre for University Teaching in Medicine, Tübingen, Germany
  • Nora Celebi - Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetology, Angiology, Nephrology and Clinical Chemistry, Tübingen, Germany; Member of the German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), Tübingen, Germany
  • Thomas Shiozawa - Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Institute of Anatomy, Department of Experimental Embryology, Tübingen, Germany
  • Reimer Riessen - Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Intensive Care Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, Tübingen, Germany
  • Christoph Nikendei - University of Heidelberg, Medical Hospital, Department of General Internal and Psychosomatic Medicine, Heidelberg, Germany
  • corresponding author Peter Weyrich - Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetology, Angiology, Nephrology and Clinical Chemistry, Tübingen, Germany; Member of the German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), Tübingen, Germany

GMS Z Med Ausbild 2012;29(3):Doc41

doi: 10.3205/zma000811, urn:nbn:de:0183-zma0008110

This is the English version of the article.
The German version can be found at: http://www.egms.de/de/journals/zma/2012-29/zma000811.shtml

Received: April 20, 2011
Revised: October 18, 2011
Accepted: November 22, 2011
Published: May 15, 2012

© 2012 Heni et al.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.en). You are free: to Share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work, provided the original author and source are credited.


Abstract

Objective: Peer-assisted learning is widely used in medical education. However, little is known about an appropriate didactic preparation for peer tutors. We herein describe the development of a focused didactic training for skills lab tutors in Internal Medicine and report on a retrospective survey about the student tutors’ acceptance and the perceived transferability of attended didactic training modules.

Methods: The course consisted of five training modules:

1.
‘How to present and explain effectively’: the student tutors had to give a short presentation with subsequent video analysis and feedback in order to learn methods of effective presentation.
2.
‘How to explain precisely’: Precise explanation techniques were trained by exercises of exact description of geometric figures and group feedback.
3.
‘How to explain on impulse’: Spontaneous teaching presentations were simulated and feedback was given.
4.
‘Peyton’s 4 Step Approach’: Peyton‘s Method for explanation of practical skills was introduced and trained by the participants.
5.
‘How to deal with critical incidents’: Possibilities to deal with critical teaching situations were worked out in group sessions.

Twenty-three student tutors participated in the retrospective survey by filling out an electronic questionnaire, after at least 6 months of teaching experience.

Results: The exercise ‘How to present and explain effectively’ received the student tutors’ highest rating for their improvement of didactic qualification and was seen to be most easily transferable into the skills lab environment. This module was rated as the most effective module by nearly half of the participants. It was followed by ‘Peyton’s 4 Step Approach’ , though it was also seen to be the most delicate method in regard to its transfer into the skills lab owing to time concerns. However, it was considered to be highly effective. The other modules received lesser votes by the tutors as the most helpful exercise in improving their didactic qualification for skills lab teaching.

Conclusion: We herein present a pilot concept for a focused didactic training of peer tutors and present results of a retrospective survey among our skills lab tutors about the distinct training modules. This report might help other faculties to design didactic courses for skills lab student tutors.

Keywords: Peer-assisted learning, Skills lab, didactic training, Peyton's Methode


Introduction

Peer-assisted learning (PAL) is widely used in medical education [1], [2], and is popular among tutees as well as their peer tutors [3]. PAL has been established throughout a broad range of medical specialties including communication skills as well as a variety of technical medical skills [4], [5], [6], [7]. The efficiency of PAL has been investigated in very different contexts, as e.g. injection skills [8], basic abdominal ultrasound [9], musculosceletal ultrasound [10], communication skills [7] and clinical examination courses [11]. Since there is a positive correlation between effective teaching and the competency of the teacher [12], [13], [14], [15], the student tutors ability to teach is crucial for the success of the tutees. Thus, making tutors ‘fit to teach’ is of pivotal importance for an effective PAL program.

Only some programs reported to train tutors in didactic techniques for teaching them on how to teach [7], [12], [16], [17], [18]. However, most of these reports lack of any details on the corresponding didactic syllabus used in these settings. In addition, most of these programs did not evaluate their didactic training program in regard to its acceptance and its transferability into teaching reality (see ref. [12] for further review).

At our faculty, we introduced a student-tutor based technical skills lab training in 2005 [4].

After establishing student tutor training courses in regard to taught medical skills, we stepwise introduced a specific didactic tutor training, designed by our Competence Center for University Teaching in Medicine [19]. This training comprises five distinct elements, reaching from Peyton’s Method [20] to a tutorial on effective presentation techniques based on individual feedback by video coaching. Our PAL system was found to be effective in a clinical skills lab setting as well as in undergraduate anatomy courses [8], [9], [21], [22].

In this paper, we report the details of our didactic training for skills lab student tutors, which is provided at the beginning of the tutors’ teaching activities. We comment on why certain contents of the didactic training were selected for our purpose. In addition, we provide the results of a retrospective survey among 23 experienced skills lab student tutors, both on their acceptance of the training and on their experience with the subsequent transfer of learned didactic elements into the real teaching situation.


Methods

Participants

We invited 25 experienced (more than 6 months of teaching activity) student tutors who worked in our skills lab for Internal Medicine to participate voluntarily in this survey. A total of 23 tutors responded (11 females, 12 males). All study participants had received a didactic training targeted to their needs as a teacher in undergraduate skills lab training before their teaching activity (see below for further details on this training). The survey participants were from three different tutor cohorts, and therefore were trained on three separate occasions with a time lag of 6 months each. As not all modules were taught to every single student out of the 25 surveyed tutors in this pilot project, the number of participants for each of the modules slightly differs and is given separately in brackets.

General considerations on helpful didactic elements

The 1-day didactic training of student tutors was conducted in parallel groups of no more than 8 participants. The courses were held by two experienced instructors. If appropriate, e.g. for more extensive individual instruction, the groups were either divided in smaller groups, or they joined in a plenary session for theoretical input. The aim of the didactic training was to provide helpful didactic techniques and tips for the upcoming skills lab tutorial. In our opinion, student tutors not only need medical professional knowledge, but also social, communicative, and conflict solving competencies as well as knowledge about group dynamics and some insight into different learning theories. In our training, the tutors worked on the topics interactively (“learning by doing”) and transferred the new information learned to their own tutorial setting. In the following, the main training modules are presented in detail:

Description of the didactic training

Module 1

Title: How to present and explain effectively (N=19)

Objectives:

  • Demanding active knowledge from the students using activating teaching methods,
  • Giving and receiving feedback effectively.

Method: A tutorial simulation with 1:1 video analysis [23] – The tutors were asked to simulate a 7 min-tutorial session that they had prepared at home (group size: no more than 8 participants). The module was focused on techniques like explaining, visualizing, questioning, impulse setting as well as important presentation aspects like e.g. eye contact and body language. Using the simulations as case model, we focused on one or two of the techniques and discussed alternatives. Giving and receiving feedback effectively was practiced extensively during these sessions. Peers provided systematic feedback with a structured observation sheet. The student tutors’ self reflections, their peers’ feedback as well as 1:1 trainer’s feedback during watching their own video ensured a comprehensive view on their acting as a teacher.

Module 2

Title: How to explain precisely (N=21)

Objective: Getting aware of how difficult it is to describe a problem in such a way that the audience may understand correctly, and learning supportive as well as interfering aspects.

Method: In groups of four students, a one way-communication was constructed: One participant was asked to turn his/her back on the others and to describe a complex geometrical figure without any eye or reciprocal verbal contact. Two other participants were listening and tried to reconstruct the figure by means of given wooden pieces, by using sign language only. The fourth person observed and recorded positive and negative observations for further plenary discussion: What worked best? What impeded the understanding?

Module 3

Title: How to explain on impulse (N=12; provided only for tutor cohort 3)

Objective: Answering questions by explaining in a structured, understandable and precise way.

Method: Spontaneous teaching presentations as might occur during the skills lab tutorial were simulated. The tutor had to explain on demand a FAQ, an abstract term, a defined clinical problem, a physiological or topographical background to each tutorial module. For the ad hoc-exercise, topics consented by the group were written on a piece of paper. In turn, any participant drew a task and started to “explain immediately and, if appropriate, visualize” in 2-3 minutes. Peer feedback was focused on structure, comprehensibility and visualization tools.

Module 4

Title: How to convey practical skills effectively with Peyton’s 4 Step Approach [20] (N=23)

Objective: Teaching complex practical skills.

Method: The tutors were asked to prepare any practical skill that they would like to teach their peers, as e.g. making a sailor’s knot, knitting, dancing, using chemical pipettes correctly, or suturing. In groups of 3, the tutors practiced by following the four steps of Peyton’s Method, with one person in each group observing. Finally, the positive and negative experiences were analyzed and the transfer into tutorial practice was discussed.

Module 5

Title: How to deal with critical incidents (N=20)

Objective: Ensuring a conductive atmosphere in the tutorial group and handling difficult teaching situations.

Method: Tutors need to perceive group processes in order to influence them as positive as possible. For reviewing group dynamics [24], a trainer input to group development was integrated. In a brainstorming, the tutors collected situations that they perceived as difficult in earlier teaching or speaker situations. Critical incidents and the role occupied by certain participants (e.g. the “opposer”, the “troublemaker”, the “insensible”, etc.) were analyzed systematically. Supportive and interfering roles were worked out, and alternatives of reactions were discussed.

Evaluation

Retrospective evaluation was performed when tutors had at least six months experience as a teacher following the didactic course. We used an online questionnaire consisting of a 6-point Likert scale (1=totally agree, 6=totally disagree) for each provided module, a global rating of the didactic training and a text box for free comments. In this global rating, tutors were asked, which of the 5 distinct modules had mostly improved their didactic qualification. Furthermore, data on previous education in other medical specialties (nurse, paramedic) or previous teaching activities/experiences were obtained in order to avoid any systematic bias.


Results

Of the 23 student tutors participating in this survey, a total of 17 disposed over previous teaching experience as e.g. as a student tutor in gross anatomy, pediatrics or emergency medicine. Having previous experience as a teacher was not associated with preference for one of the modules of the didactic training. In general, the tutors’ perception of the didactic course was very positive, as reflected by the oral as well as written feedback (some examples are given in table 1 [Tab. 1]).

The module “How to present effectively” was rated to improve the tutors’ general didactic qualification most (1.79±0.71), while there were only little differences between the other four modules provided (2.35-2.68). The module “How to present effectively” was also seen to be most easily transferable into the skills lab environment (1.68±0.75). Furthermore, the practice “How to present effectively” was reported to be the most useful part (1.21±0.42) for skills lab teaching, followed by “How to deal with critical incidents” (1.35±0.81, further details are provided in table 2 [Tab. 2]).

On the other hand, “Peyton’s 4 Step Approach” was rated to be the teaching method most delicate to transfer into the skills lab learning environment (3.23±1.69, table 2 [Tab. 2]). In their personal comments, most tutors which encountered difficulties in transferring Peyton’s Method reported that they did not doubt in general about the usefulness of this teaching method, but rather got a time problem in regard to the curriculum to be taught. However, when asked how often tutors used this specific method, roughly one quarter marked every of the four possible answers (see figure 1 [Fig. 1]).

In the general rating about which single module was considered to be best suitable for improving the tutors’ didactic qualification, nearly half (9 out of 20) chose “How to present effectively”, five chose “How to convey practical skills effectively with Peyton’s Method”, followed by “How to explain precisely” (3 out of 20), and “How to deal with incidents” (2 of 20). One participant chose the part “How to explain on impulse”.


Discussion

In the present pilot study, the didactic course comprising five distinct modules for student tutors of technical skills lab training was very well accepted. The module “How to present effectively” was seen as most easily transferable to the skills lab environment as well as to mostly improve the student tutors’ didactic qualification. Our Competence Center of University Teaching [19] now regularly offers this didactic training twice a year for all student tutors involved in teaching practical skills at our faculty [4], [9], [22]. Although a complete day of training represents a remarkable amount of time, we appraise this expenditure as warranted in light of the number of student tutors that benefit from these courses based on the centrally organized tutor program of our faculty. It should be mentioned that in addition to this central didactic training all tutors are taught by experienced physicians in regard to their competence for the clinical skills themselves.

Interestingly, one module is discussed most controversial among our student tutors in regard to its transferability: “Peyton’s Four-Step Approach” [20]. Even if believed to improve the didactic qualification most by five of the tutors participating in our survey, only less then half the student tutors used it regularly or at least sometimes during their teaching activity in the skills lab (see figure 1 [Fig. 1]). This fraction of tutors was very positive about the method, while the others criticized especially the amount of time that is needed to teach by Peyton’s Method to a group of 4 students (general tutor:student-ratio = 1:4), especially in regard to the skills lab curriculum that has to be taught at our faculty. Hence, the use of Peyton’s Method depends strongly on the individual tutor and maybe on his or her individual teaching style. It is of note that a very recent study [25] revealed “Peyton’s Four-Step Approach” to be superior to standard instruction for teaching medical skills (gastric-tube insertion) with the same amount of teaching time. This finding let us assume that the criticized need of extra teaching time may rather reflect the students’ personal perception and not an objectifiable drawback. We therefore consider Peyton’s Method as a very effective teaching method for practical skills and as a feasible approach for PAL teaching. For this reason, this module remains included in our didactic training.

As we identified the module “How to present effectively” to improve didactic qualification most, to be most easily transferable, and to be most useful for teachers in the skill lab, we suggest including such a module in every didactic course for skills lab tutors. The usefulness of video feedback was implied by another study on peer-teaching [26] and may be partially due to the uncommon – at least for medical students – opportunity to gain an external view on the own teaching style.

We would like to point out that this report only is a descriptive study due to the limited number of participants, the retrospective design and the fact that only the students’ self-perception has been the subject of the conducted survey. However, a recent study from our faculty has shown that a combined technical and didactic training improves the acceptance of student tutors among their tutees [22]. In this study, the same didactic training modules have been used as described in this report in detail. We therefore decided to describe this training in more detail, and are convinced that our results in regard to its acceptance and efficiency are transferable to other PAL systems of other faculties.

Further randomized and prospective studies are needed to optimize the targeted training of peer tutors. These studies should also include an objective evaluation of the tutors’ didactic improvement and the students’ performance after the training.


Authors' contributions

MH analyzed the data of the survey and drafted the main parts of the manuscript. MLK designed the didactic training which now is provided to all student tutors at our faculty. She described this course in detail in the method section, and also contributed to the survey form. NC is responsible for the tutor programme in ultrasound diagnostic, TS is responsible for the corresponding PAL programme in anatomy, and RR is responsible for the student mentor programme at the ICU of our faculty. NC, TS and RR all corrected the manuscript. CN is responsible for the skills lab programme at the University of Heidelberg and contributed to both the survey design and the manuscript. PW initiated the PAL programme for skills lab tutors at our faculty and is responsible for the medical skills lab training part. He conducted the survey and contributed to both study design and drafting the manuscript.


Acknowledgements

We thank all student tutors for their great engagement and their frank feedback in our PAL program, especially Michaela Mack (MD), Melanie Adam-Callau (MD) and Nicolai Netzhammer (MD) who contributed a lot to the success of this project at its beginning.


Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.


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