"Influential" Intraoperative Educators and Variability of Teaching Styles
- PMID: 36333173
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2022.10.002
"Influential" Intraoperative Educators and Variability of Teaching Styles
Abstract
Objectives: Academic surgeons manage their role as intraoperative educators in a variety of ways. Such variability is neither idiosyncratic nor is there a single best approach. This study sought to explore the practices of surgeons deemed influential by their residents, allowing insight into a variety of potentially effective practices.
Participants: Constructivist grounded theory guided data collection and analysis. Data sources included surveys from senior surgical residents (PGY3-6) and recent graduates from an academic hospital in Canada (36% response rate), intraoperative observations of teaching interactions, and semi-structured interviews with observed surgeons. Rigour was supported by data triangulation, constant comparison, and collection to theoretical sufficiency.
Design: We developed a framework grouping effective teaching into three overlapping approaches: exacting, empowering, and fostering. The approaches differ based on the level of independence granted and the degree of expectation placed on individual residents. Each demonstrates different strategies for balancing the multiple supervisory roles and patient care obligations faced by academic surgeons. We also identified strategies that could be used across approaches to enhance learning.
Conclusions: For surgical educators seeking to improve upon the quality of the intraoperative supervision they provide, frameworks such as this may serve as models of effective supervision. Enhancing surgeons' knowledge of proven strategies, combined with reflecting on how they teach and how they balance responsibilities to patients and trainees, may allow them to broaden their educational practice.
Keywords: Empowering; Exacting; Fostering; Intraoperative teaching; Supervision.
Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of Competing Interest This project was partially funded by the Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry Department of Surgery Internal Research Fund and the Opportunities Fund of the Academic Health Sciences Centre Alternative Funding Plan of the Academic Medical Organization of Southwestern Ontario (AMOSO).
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