Title: Individuals Make the Team: Recognizing Individual Learners
1Individuals Make the Team Recognizing Individual
Learners
- Ashlesha Dayal, MD
- Assistant Professor
- Nadine T. Katz, MD
- Associate Professor
- Albert Einstein College of Medicine Montefiore
Medical Center - Bronx, NY
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3Objectives
- Establishing that people within a team assume a
Role - Recognizing different team roles and their
importance to the team interaction - Understanding basic tenets of feedback and
remediation - Using knowledge of team roles to offer
individualized and specific feedback
4What is a Team?
- A cooperative unit created to achieve one or
several goals - Team dynamics unseen natural forces that
strongly influence how a team reacts, behaves or
performs - Team dynamics dependent on the individual
makeup of the team - the learners
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6Recognizing Team Dynamics
- Looking for the forces that influence team
behavior - Forces include
- Personality styles
- Tools and technology
- Organizational culture
- Team processes/ methodologies/ procedures
- Most important force is Team Roles (incorporating
Personality Styles)
7Team Roles
- Belbin described a team role as a tendency to
behave, contribute and interrelate with others in
a particular way - Identification is an effective way to assess
strengths and weaknesses of individual members - Provides opportunity for recognition of ways to
improve performance and offer targeted feedback
Belbin, R. Meredith, 2003 Management Teams Why
They Succeed or Fail Oxford Press
8Team Roles Action Oriented
- Shaper challenging, dynamic, thrives on pressure
- Implementer Disciplined, reliable, conservative
and efficient - Completer finisher Painstaking, conscientious,
anxious
9Team Roles Action OrientedStrengths
Weaknesses
- Shaper challenging, dynamic, thrives on pressure
- Implementer disciplined, reliable, conservative,
efficient - Completer finisher Painstakingly conscientious,
anxious
- Prone to provocation/ offends easily
- Somewhat inflexible/ slow to respond to new
possibilities - Inclined to worry unduly/ reluctant to delegate
10Team Roles People Oriented
- Coordinator Mature, confident, clarifies goals,
delegates well - Team worker cooperative, mild, perceptive and
diplomatic - Resource investigator Extrovert, enthusiastic,
communicative
11Team Roles People OrientedStrengths
Weaknesses
- Coordinator mature, confident, clarifies goals,
delegates well - Team worker cooperative, mild, perceptive,
diplomatic, averts friction - Resource investigator extrovert, enthusiastic,
communicative, makes contacts
- Can be seen as manipulative/ offloads personal
work - Indecisive in crunch situations
- Over optimistic/ loses interest after initial
enthusiasm
12Team Roles Cerebral
- Plant creative, imaginative, unorthodox
- Monitor evaluator sober, strategic, and
discerning - Specialist single minded, self starter, dedicated
13Team Roles Cerebral Strengths Weaknesses
- Plant creative, imaginative, unorthodox, solves
difficult problems - Monitor evaluator sober, strategic and
discerning, judges accurately - Specialist single minded, self starter, dedicated
- Ignores incidentals/ very preoccupied
- Lacks drive and ability to inspire others
- Narrow contribution, dwells on technicalities
14Feedback
- Feedback is an essential component in education
because it shapes future performance - The distinction between feedback and evaluation
sets the stage - Feedback is formative, behavior based
- Evaluation is summative judgments expressed as
normative statements
15Feedback
- Students and residents often report that they do
not receive feedback - Most students and residents are inexperienced at
seeking out feedback and need to have time
assigned - Most faculty are not skilled at giving feedback
16Feedback Helpful Techniques
- Feedback is enhanced by good interpersonal
relationships - Neutral, private location is optimal
- Must be timely
- Student buy-in is key to success
- Follow-up is essential
- Avoid overload
17The Feedback Sandwich
- Discuss observations of skills and behaviors done
well - Then identify specific areas in need of
improvement - Finish with suggestions, alternative behaviors
and positive comments
18Feedback Tenets
- Think before speaking
- Feedback should represent shared goals
- Feedback should be expected by the learner and be
well timed - Feedback should be based on first hand data
- Feedback should be regulated in quantity
Reynolds and Ende, 2000. Teaching and Learning in
Medical Surgical Education
19Feedback Tenets
- Feedback should deal with specific performances,
not generalizations - Feedback should be phrased in descriptive,
non-evaluative language - Feedback should deal with decisions and actions,
not assumed intentions or interpretations
Reynolds and Ende, 2000. Teaching and Learning in
Medical Surgical Education
20Feedback Tenets
- Feedback should include guidelines for improving
performance (action plan) - Feedback should be based on consistent standards
and procedures - Feedback should be followed up
- Feedback should be understood by the learner
Ask him/her to repeat it
21Guidelines For Feedback Providers
- Specify that this is the feedback session
- Constructive feedback allows for change
- Document feedback given and the response
- Especially in non-responsive situations
- Cite specific examples offered in the feedback
session - Set date for follow up and follow through
- Check for student understanding
22Feedback in Problem Situations
- Target the feedback to the particular learner
- Importance of knowing roles in team settings
- Importance of knowing rules of feedback
23Remediation
- Develop active management plan for remediation
and document it - Target plan to appreciate the team role
- Follow-through has to be persistent
- Document all feedback and responses
- Define students accountability and explain
consequences of failure to change - Enlist help when necessary-know escalation
procedure at your school
24Wrap Up
- Team dynamics are most influenced by team roles
assumed by the individual learner - Three main role categories are action oriented,
people oriented and cerebral - Knowledge of roles and characteristics offer
chance for individualized feedback - Knowledge of basic feedback tenets is critical to
receptive response
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- The remainder of the session will concentrate on
providing focused feedback to particular students
and situations, using the concepts of team roles,
rules of feedback, and plans of remediation.
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