4.6 Article

Effectiveness of tutor shadowing on faculty development in problem-based learning

Journal

BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-022-03615-0

Keywords

Tutor shadowing; Faculty development; Problem-based learning

Funding

  1. National Taiwan University Hospital [NTUH 111-S0244, NTUH 111-S0312]

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This study evaluated the effect of tutor shadowing on the teaching skills of novice problem-based learning (PBL) tutors and developed a tutoring-skill scale (TS-scale). The results showed that tutor shadowing significantly improved the teaching confidence of novice PBL tutors across three key domains of tutoring competencies. The TS-scale developed in this study can be used in future research on faculty development design.
Background: To enhance tutors' teaching skills, tutor shadowing for novice tutors of problem-based learning (PBL) in addition to conventional faculty development (FD) was applied. This study aimed to develop a tutoring-skill scale (TS-scale) and evaluate the effect of shadowing on PBL tutors. Methods: This study employed a before-and-after study design with three phases. In phase 1, a TS-scale was elaborated. A validity examination was performed in phase 2. Phase 3 was a study of the effectiveness using a TS-scale survey of novice PBL tutors before and after the FD course. The FD course for novice PBL tutors included an FD workshop and PBL shadowing activities. Results: A TS-scale with a 32-item questionnaire of self-rated confidence for PBL tutors was identified in phase 1. In phase 2, 7 experienced specialists in medical education were invited to evaluate the content validity of the scale. The item content validity index (I-CVI) ranged from 0.86 to 1, and the scale-CVI (S-CVI) was 0.95. A total of 85 novice PBL tutors completed the TS-scale before the FD course, yielding a Cronbach's alpha of 0.98. An exploratory factor analysis with varimax rotation was performed. The twenty-four items with significant loadings greater than 0.5 were incorporated into a new TS-scale and were grouped into three factors: student contact, medical expertise, and teaching expertise. In phase 3, 76 novice PBL tutors completed the 24-item TS-scale before (pretest) and after (posttest) the FD course. Their self-rated confidence improved significantly across the three factors after the FD course. The pretest and posttest scores did not differ according to the tutors' gender, the grades they taught, or their specialty background. Conclusions: Novice PBL tutors benefit from FD that incorporates tutor shadowing in the 3 key domains of tutoring competencies. The TS-scale developed in this study can be applied in future research on FD design.

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