#GPFUQ 119. How do you know
what you don’t know?
You won’t but you
can assess your learning needs. To be able to discover all your learning needs
have to try to address the St Augustine, Johari, Rumsfeld question. How can you
ever know what you don’t know? The
different types of needs assessments include:
Gap or discrepancy
analysis. This formal method involves comparing performance with stated
intended competencies- by self-assessment, peer assessment, or objective
testing -and planning education accordingly.
Reflection on
action and reflection in action Reflection on action is an aspect of
experiential learning and involves thinking back to some performance, with or
without triggers (such as videotape or audiotape), and identifying what was
done well and what could have been done better. The latter category indicates
learning needs. Reflection in action involves thinking about actual performance
at the time that it occurs and requires some means of recording identified
strengths and weaknesses at the time.
Self-assessment by
diaries, journals, log books, weekly reviews. This is an extension of
reflection that involves keeping a diary or other account of experiences.
However usually these tend to be written nearer the time of their review than
the time of the activity being recorded.
Peer review - this
involves doctors assessing each other's practice and giving feedback and
perhaps advice about possible education, training, or organisational strategies
to improve performance. The main types of peer review are internal, external,
informal, multidisciplinary, and physician assessment. The last of these is the
most formal, involving rating forms completed by nominated colleagues, and
shows encouraging levels of validity, reliability, and acceptability.
Observation in more
formal settings doctors can be observed performing specific tasks that can be
rated by an observer, either according to known criteria or more informally.
The results are discussed, and learning needs are identified. The observer can
be a peer, a senior, or a disinterested person if the ratings are sufficiently
objective or overlap with the observer's area of expertise (such as
communication skills or management).
Critical incident
review and significant event auditing Although this may be used to identify the
competencies of a profession or for quality assurance, it can also be used on
an individual basis to identify learning needs. The method involves individuals
identifying and recording, say, one incident each week in which they feel they
should have performed better, analysing the incident by its setting, exactly
what occurred, and the outcome and why it was ineffective.
Practice review. A routine review of notes, charts, prescribing, letters, requests, etc, can identify learning needs, especially if the format of looking at what is satisfactory and what leaves room for improvement is followed.
Practice review. A routine review of notes, charts, prescribing, letters, requests, etc, can identify learning needs, especially if the format of looking at what is satisfactory and what leaves room for improvement is followed.
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