Teaching Clinical Skills
Teaching clinical skills is a foundation skill of any health educator in a clinical setting. Clinical range from simple tasks and to more complication and involved procedures. However, the basic and essential steps for effective teaching a skill are the same in any situation. Teaching a skill requires effective process, communication and feedback. This is a very practical and “hands on” workshop.
At the end of this workshop participants will be able to:
1. Understand the role of skills in clinical learning
2. Describe and justify the essential steps in learning a skill.
3. Analyse skills into stages for communicating to learners.
4. Teach a skill using a simple and sustainable technique.
5. Isolate features of and give feedback on skill teaching technique.
In preparation for this workshop, all participants should bring equipment that will enable them to teach a simple skill to other participants; examples of skills used (besides a clinical one) in the past have been; origami, folding a napkin, card tricks, using chop sticks; derigging a beach tent; ironing a shirt; knitting e.g. casting on; sewing on a button; throwing a pizza (from pre-prepared dough).
PLEASE NOTE: The skills should not take more than 3 minutes to demonstrate by a skilled person. If your skill takes longer, just prepare a component of it to teach
Facilitator:
Brian Jolly
Professor of Medical Education,
Health Workforce Education and Assessment Research Team,
Faculty of Medicine, Nursing & Health Sciences, Monash University
Email: [email protected]
Location: Royal Darwin Hospital, Auditorium Room 1, Rocklands Drive, Casuarina
Date and time: 24th March, 6pm - 8.30 pm
Costs: $110
RSVP: Numbers are limited; please RSVP to Alex Billeter [email protected] by 11th March, 2011
CPD Points: RACGP 6 QI&CPD and RCNA 3 CNE, ACRRM PDP (TBA)