My
dream is to become not only a teacher at a PA program but to one day become
Program Director. I thought my dreams
were finally coming to fruition when I landed a position as Assistant Professor
at a prestigious university. I was in
hog heaven. However, my dream slowly
turned into a nightmare as the weeks and months unfolded.
My
first day on the job was not spent in orientation to the medical school or to
the hospital, but yet grading first year students performing their first
patient encounter. I was paired with a
senior faculty member and told to watch how they “graded” the students; then, I
would observe students and grade by myself.
The torment didn’t stop there. I
was then given the “write-ups” that the
students had turned in from their experience to grade. I asked if there was a guide or some type of
rubric to go by and was told to grade it like I would a note. WHAT!!! You’re telling a PA who had been
practicing, at that time, for over 11 years to grade and treat a student‘s
note, whom had only been in the program for 8 weeks, like I would a note I
would write in a patient’s chart.
Now,
the week that ensued after the students went on break would have been perfect
to go to orientation. No such luck. I did not receive an orientation to the
department nor did I know how or what the students were learning. I was paired with a “mentor” but she did not
tell me much. She kept stating since I
had a doctorate degree, I could figure things out on my own.
I
was never taught any basic principles of faculty, scholarship, promotion or
tenure, how to teach, put together lectures or design curriculum. I was not provided with a notebook or guide
to help me. I was instructed by the
Program Chair to go to the medical school and watch four different people, whom
he identified, lecture and then compare and contrast how they teach. That was it.
Unfortunately,
this tale is more common than people think.
Many clinicians are choosing to pursue a clinical doctorate such as the
DHSc degree. With this terminal degree,
they are able to transition to the world of academia. However, much concern is raised due to the
fact that most clinical doctorates do not provide formal education in pedagogy,
andragogy or research and development (Kahanov, Eberman, Yoder and Kahanov,
2012). Most clinicians have no prior
education background and are having some difficulty transitioning to education
due to this. Difficulty can be cause
due to lack of orientation into academia, lack of mentorship or understanding
of classroom management and teaching (Kahanov et al., 2012).
Kahanov
et al. (2012) reports that junior faculty, which consists of both traditional
and clinical doctorate faculty (CDF), undergo socialization to help with the
transition and uses the WISE Principles of Mentorship. Winning trust, inviting acceptance, support
without rescue and embracing growth are the properties used by senior or
seasoned faculty members to help transition CDF (Kahanov et al., 2012).
Virginia
Commonwealth University has developed an interdisciplinary Faculty Learning
Committee (FLC) to “establish and improve faculty development” at the
university (Sicat, Kreutzer, Gary, Ivey, Marlowe, Pellegrini, Shuford and
Simons, 2014, p.1). Several faculty
members from the five different health science schools on the campus started
the group. The goals of the FLC is to
“(1): share information on expertise and resources available to faculty
development programs represented by the FLC members; (2) identify faculty
development topics and techniques that the group; (3) choose areas where
faculty development professionals might collaborate to design new faculty
development programs and/or new methods of delivery based on identified learner
needs, evaluate these initiatives and consider ways to improve; (4) create
models or modules available to other faculty development providers” (Sicat et
al., 2014, p. 2).
My recommendations for new faculty
members:
1- Orientation
noted only to the university system but the to the department.
2- Detailed
outline of what the faculty member will be expected to do.
3- Assign
a mentor who will actually work the new faculty on how to teach, curriculum
design, promotion, scholarship, etc. The
mentor will have to essentially teach them and if now, enroll the faculty
member in some type of class/conference to teach these things.
4- Do
not “throw them to the wolves”. New
faculty should be given sufficient time to acclimate to the new
surroundings. Allow them to sit in the
class and take notes and learn.
5- New
faculty goes to Center for Teaching Excellence (CTC). If at a university with
separate undergraduate/graduate programs, have a CTC for the graduate/medical
school.
6- Realize
that the first year is a transition; mistakes will be made. However, the more
the new faculty is exposed to things and learns, the better they will become.
References:
Castiglioni, A., Aagaard, E., Spencer, A., Nicholson, L., Karani, R., Bates, C., Willet, L.,Cheda, S. (2012). Succeeding as a Clinician Educator: Useful Tips and Resources General Journal of Internal Medicine. 28:136-140.
Castiglioni, A., Aagaard, E., Spencer, A., Nicholson, L., Karani, R., Bates, C., Willet, L.,Cheda, S. (2012). Succeeding as a Clinician Educator: Useful Tips and Resources General Journal of Internal Medicine. 28:136-140.
Kahanov,
L., Eberman, L., Yoder, A., Kahanov, M. (2012). Culture Shock: Transitioning
From Clinical Practice to Educator. The Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practices. 10:1-5.
From Clinical Practice to Educator. The Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and Practices. 10:1-5.
Sicat,
B., Kreutzer, K., Gary, J., Ivey, C., Marlowe, E., Pellegrini, J., Shuford, V.,
Simons, D. (2014). A Collaboration
Among Health Sciences Schools to Enhance Faculty Development in Teaching. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education.
78(1-5).
Hi LaToya,
ReplyDeleteI am in my second teaching position currently, and I can attest that new faculty are often hired and then immediately pushed into their new teaching position without much (or any) training or guidance. I suspect this happens most often due to the school being in a crisis position due to a time crunch. It is still not an effective way to start a new faculty member.
I am very fortunate to have started this DHS program when I did as we now have the Education concentration option. While I think Population Health and Management are important areas, they will not benefit me nearly as much as the Education concentration has.
It's good to see that some universities are starting to recognize this need for faculty training. Faculty training is what I consider the entire DHS program to be for me.
Don Jay