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Moving Toward a Competency Based Curriculum

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Title: Moving Toward a Competency Based Curriculum


1
The Outcome Project
  • Moving Toward a Competency Based Curriculum

2
Institutional RequirementsEffective 7/1/02
  • IIB1- Institutions must ensure that
  • each program has defined, in accordance with the
    Program Requirements,
  • the specific knowledge skills, and attitudes
    required and
  • provide educational experiences as needed
  • in order for their residents to demonstrate.

3
Institutional RequirementsEffective 7/1/02
  • 1B3d3 the review should appraise
  • The educational objectives of each program
  • The adequacy of resources
  • The effectiveness of each program in meeting its
    objectives
  • The use of dependable measures to assess
    residents competence
  • The effectiveness of each program in implementing
    a process that links educational outcomes with
    program improvement

4
A Burden?
Or An Opportunity?
5
consider
  • a new PGY-1 in internal medicine. He never
    started an I.V. in medical school (or a central
    line or a paracentesis)
  • a PGY-3 surgery resident. The attending in
    pediatric surgery was on sabbatical during his
    rotation(so hes assigned to the research lab)
  • a PGY-6 cardiology fellow. The
    electrophysiologist quit during his rotation in
    the EP lab(so he was assigned to the CCU again)
  • a PGY-2 resident in pediatrics is discovered to
    have dyslexia (or does 6 weeks of drug rehab or
    12 weeks of maternity leave)
  • a PGY 4 pathology resident was pulled from her
    bloodbanking rotation to work in chemistry
  • the Childrens Hospital shifts its affiliation to
    UF

6
Question
  • How do we assure the public, the boards, and the
    accreditors that a resident finishing a training
    program has actually mastered the knowledge,
    skills, and attitudes we deem to be essential for
    the safe practice of ..

7
Competence and Competency
  • Competence personal ability to perform a task
    or process (minimal versus desirable)
  • Competency complex set of behaviors which is
    required in order to be competent
  • Competency Domains
  • KNOWLEDGE
  • SKILLS
  • ATTITUDES

8
Necessary Planning
  • Define the required competencies (per year, for
    the total training, etc.)
  • Identify the learning objectives for a beginner,
    intermediate and advanced learner (discrete
    measurable outcomes)
  • Design the evaluation tool that allows you to
    judge the degree of accomplishment

9
Types of Evaluation
  • Formative- done early in the process to evaluate
    the adequacy of the methodology and the
    appropriateness of the tools (judge the education
    process not the student)
  • Summative done at the completion of some or
    all of the curriculum (judge the student)

10
Types of Evaluation
  • Criterion based (uses an external standard or
    criterion)
  • Norm-based (ranks within a peer group)
  • Objective based (against defined objectives)
  • Domain based (evaluates a specified field)

11
In Service Examination
  • Is it a formative tool to evaluate the program
    or a summative tool to evaluate the resident?
  • Answer- Both
  • What type of evaluation process?
  • Normative (peer group) and domain (specific
    field) No criterion, threshold or standard!
  • What does it test?
  • Short term knowledge of facts.

12
In the days of Osler and Halsted
  • Patients were inpatients
  • Hospital stays were long
  • Insurance companies didnt have to approve
    tests, procedures, operations
  • Attendings werent slaves to the practice plan
  • IT WAS POSSIBLE TO EVALUATE KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS
    AND ATTITUDES BY OBSERVATION

13
Tools for Evaluating Competency
  • Knowledge standardized tests
  • Skills logbooks, simulated patients,
    supervised evaluation, self evaluation
  • Attitudes- 360 evaluation, faculty evaluation

14
Closing the Loop
  • Evaluation is only meaningful when it includes
    feedback to the learner early enough to allow
    change.
  • Evaluation is only meaningful when it is
    constructive, consistent, and amenable to being
    fixed.
  • Failure of a resident in an advanced year is a
    failure of the program, not the resident.

15
Pitfalls
  • Skills are the easiest to measure and document,
    and so tend to be assessed.
  • Attitudes are the most difficult to measure and
    tend to be ignored.
  • Recent public opinion challenges the
    professionalism and communication of finishing
    residents.

16
Summary
  • Identify desired competency
  • Define rotation specific learning objectives
  • Teach faculty how to evaluate
  • Use evaluation tools consistently
  • Provide timely feedback
  • Document

17
What are Learning Objectives?
18
Learning Objectives
  • what learners should be able to do
    (performance)
  • how well they should be able to do
    it (criterion)
  • what conditions or equipment must be available
    (condition)

19
Learning Objectives
  • What are the learning objectives for medical
    grand rounds?
  • For faculty?
  • For senior residents?
  • For PGY-1s?
  • For senior students?
  • For junior students?

20
Learning Objectives
  • What are the objectives of a rotation in the
    Emergency Department?
  • For a surgery resident
  • For a psychiatry resident
  • For a 4th year student interested in ER
  • For a neurology resident
  • For a pediatrics resident

21
Big Bird does Planning
  • Ask yourself what an individual must know, be
    able to do, and act to be an acceptable.
  • Break these KSAs into smaller learning units
    and identify beginner, mid, advanced.
  • Decide where these will fit into the x years.
  • Describe each component with an action verb
  • Ask yourself how you are going to evaluate each
    important component.
  • Distribute the objectives into the rotations and
    measure (evaluate) success in each rotation.

22
Epilogue
  • If you cant define it and cant measure it, you
    dont know what it is!
  • If you dont know what it is, you cant improve
    it!
  • If you cant improve it, why do it?

23
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