The objective of this study is to develop a practical framework of competencies and behaviors which define an effective surgical educator.
A modified Delphi approach was used. A literature review and series of discussions with surgical education experts led to creation of a survey instrument which was sent to surgical faculty and trainees from a single academic institution. The results from this initial survey informed the creation of the subsequent survey instrument which was also sent to surgical faculty and trainees. Focus groups with surgical faculty and residents were conducted separately, transcribed, deidentified, and then evaluated for recurring themes. A competency framework was developed.
The surveys were administered and focus groups were conducted at the University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, a tertiary care academic institution.
Residents, fellows, and faculty surgeons from the fields of general surgery, plastic surgery, vascular surgery, orthopedic surgery, otolaryngology, neurosurgery, and urology.
There were 115 responses (31.3%) from 367 faculty surgeons, residents, and fellows invited to complete the initial survey examining 50 competencies. Eighteen competencies received a mean Likert score of at least 4 by both faculty and residents and were included in the subsequent survey instrument which was completed by 72 participants (19.6%). Focus groups were held separately with 6 faculty surgeons and 6 residents. Analysis of the survey results and focus group discussions identified several themes which informed the development of a competency framework consisting of 5 overarching competencies as well as 16 specific behaviors.
A practical framework was developed consisting of 5 competencies and 16 behaviors which define an effective surgical educator. The 5 competencies are: 1) fosters psychological safety, 2) displays exemplary medical knowledge and patient care, 3) diagnoses the learner and adjusts teaching, 4) communicates thought process to trainee, and 5) displays learner-centeredness. Based on the competency framework, residency leadership may specifically tailor faculty development initiatives to improve surgical education programming.
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