Teaching and Learning - Lesson 1
Teaching and Learning - Lesson 1
in Clinical Settings
by:
Dr. Maria Simplicia E. Flores
Clinicaleducation has long been recognized
as a necessary part of PT education.
The purpose of clinical education (Callahan
et al., 1968) was
1. To assist the student to correlate clinical
practices with basic sciences.
2. To acquire new knowledge, attitudes and
skill to develop ability to observe, to
evaluate, to develop realistic goals and plan
effective treatment programs.
3. To accept professional responsibility.
4. To maintain a spirit of inquiry and to
develop a pattern for continuing education.
The importance of clinical education is
expressed by students when they remind
instructors that “real learning” in PT
occurs in the clinic.
At the end of the lesson, the student
should be able to:
1. Describe the dynamic environment in
which clinical education occurs.
2. Describe the clinical learning process
and identify expected outcomes.
3. Discuss and give examples of the four
roles of a clinical teacher.
4. Identify practical strategies for
enhancing clinical teaching methods.
OBJECTIVES
Clinicallearning is situated in the context
of physical therapy practice.
It occurs in real practice settings, with
real patients, and with real physical
therapists as clinical teachers.
Clinical
system is generally organized for
the convenience of delivering health
care to the patient.
Clinicalsetting is a unique and complex
learning environment. Student
performance is based on knowing and
doing in a real situation with a real
patient or client.
Questions to Asked - CI
How do students learn in the clinic?
What is helpful for clinical teachers to
know and understand about the clinical
learning process?
Student Ownership and Responsibility
It will involve patients for whom the CI has
legal and ethical responsibilities. It is
imperative that the student accept ownership
and responsibility for the experience.
Clinical education is an opportunity for a
student to learn not only the knowledge,
skills, values, and attitudes of the profession,
but also the first experience in a lifelong
pattern of learning and continual
development as a physical therapist.
CLINICAL LEARNING
It is important that students assume the
responsibility for learning what they need
to know and how to go about learning
it.
Process of Clinical Learning
Clinical learning is a process of mutual
inquiry conducted by the student and CI
during the provision of patient care
services.
Itis a situated learning experience in
which teaching and learning occur
around the patient in a series of
complex interactions.
Bridging Theory with Practice
Primary goal of clinical teaching: to
enable the student to build bridges
between theory and practice.
Theoretical knowledge and fundamental
skills taught in the physical therapy
classroom and laboratory may be couched
in a patient problem orientation, but
students rarely learn in the clinical context
until their first clinical education
experience.
Ability to Perform Effective Actions
Knowing is not enough. Students must
learn to put their knowledge to work, in
doing so, practice and perform
fundamental skills to enhance movement.
Physical therapists examine, assess,
evaluate, plan, and treat. They palpate,
stabilize, mobilize, facilitate, and inhibit.
They teach, motivate, simplify, and
modify.
Skilled performance of these actions
comes only with practice, development,
and refinement.
Acculturation
Is the process by which a student is
socialized into the profession of
physical therapy.
The socialization process is an account
of how a new person is added to the
group and becomes a member capable of
meeting the traditional expectations of the
profession.
PhysicalTherapy is a service-oriented
profession.
Clinical education occurs in settings
where patients come to receive care.
Patients are not exhibits who give time
and money to come to a clinic to provide
an example of a diagnosis for a student.
They are real people with movement
dysfunctions that limit their ability to live
their lives the way they would choose.
Students must learn what it means to
provide service.
Majority of students use their own lives as
the primary example for the way others
live and may assume that their own
beliefs, values, and socioeconomic status
are those of the people whom they will
serve.
Critical Analysis of Clinical Competence
Accurate self-assessment is a critical
ability for professional practice.
Students acquire expectations about their
own abilities from several sources.
Successful experiences are a primary
foundation on which to add from
observing role models or receiving verbal
feedback provided by a clinical teacher or
a patient.
The expected outcome for any clinical
education experience is formally defined
by the academic program.
The goal of clinical learning is for the
student to progress from other-assisted
to self-assisted learning while
developing patterns of learning that form
the basis for a lifelong, reflective
practice.
Ongoing Re-evaluation of
Student Performance
Clinical
learning experiences or problems
need to be selected based on the
potential they provide for useful
learning.