Aligning teaching practices with an understanding of quality teaching: a faculty development agenda

Med Teach. 2011;33(2):124-30. doi: 10.3109/0142159X.2010.498489. Epub 2010 Nov 11.

Abstract

Background: To guide the future faculty development practices in a better manner, it is important to determine how clinical teachers perceive their own skill development.

Aim: The objective of this study was to examine the extent to which clinical teachers aligned their teaching practices, as measured with a self-rating instrument, with their understanding of what constitutes good clinical teaching.

Method: A sample of 1523 residents and 737 faculty members completed the clinical teaching perception inventory (CTPI) online and ranked 28 single-word descriptors that characterized clinical teachers along a seven-point scale in two measures, "My Ideal Teacher" and "Myself as a Teacher."

Results: Faculty and residents showed strikingly similar discrepancies, in both their magnitudes and directions, between their ratings of "My Ideal Teacher" and those of "Myself as a Teacher." Both residents and faculty found it most difficult to develop the stimulating, well-read, and innovative nature to meet their own standards.

Conclusions: Data did not support our hypothesis that faculty would demonstrate stronger congruence between "My Ideal Teacher" and "Myself as a Teacher" than residents. Medical faculty would benefit from future faculty development practices that are designed to assist them in becoming stimulating, well-read, and innovative teachers, while using less control and caution in their teaching.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Internship and Residency / standards*
  • Male
  • Staff Development / organization & administration*
  • Teaching / standards*