Paediatric specialist registrars’ views of educational supervision and how it can be improved: A questionnaire study

Summary Objectives To determine what paediatric specialist registrars think of the educational supervision they have received and what advice they would give to a consultant who wanted to be a more effective educational supervisor. Design A questionnaire study. Setting The North Thames Deanery, UK....

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Published inJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine Vol. 100; no. 8; pp. 375 - 378
Main Authors Lloyd, B W, Becker, D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England SAGE Publications 01.08.2007
Royal Society of Medicine
The Royal Society of Medicine
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Summary:Summary Objectives To determine what paediatric specialist registrars think of the educational supervision they have received and what advice they would give to a consultant who wanted to be a more effective educational supervisor. 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.
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Correspondence to: B W Lloyd E-mail: b.lloyd@medsch.ucl.ac.uk
Contributorship BL had the idea for this research. BL and DB designed the questionnaire and analysed the data. BL wrote the paper.
Guarantor BL.
Funding None.
Competing interests None declared.
Ethical approval None.
Acknowledgments We are grateful to Keith McKay and staff at the North Thames Deanery for sending out the questionnaires and electronic reminders.
ISSN:0141-0768
1758-1095
DOI:10.1177/014107680710000814