Teaching, Learning, and Research Hub

Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL)Considerations for Clinical Teaching andSupervision/Precepting

Panelists
Jennifer Friberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, Illinois State University
Sarah Ginsberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, Eastern Michigan University


Facilitators
Julie Honaker, PhD, CCC-A, Cleveland Clinic and The University of Akron

Description
As part of the year-long teaching symposium, seven synchronous online peer discussions were
held. In the seventh session, the panelists were asked to address SoTL and clinical teaching, and
attendees were encouraged to engage with the panelists. Below is summary of the discussion

QUESTIONS/TOPICS DISCUSSED

  • Can you discuss the application of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) in clinical
    education?
  • What might clinical education in scholarship of clinical education and learning look like,
    and where do we get started?
  • What are other data collection approaches used in the clinical setting, and how do these
    compare to approaches in the classroom setting?
  • What is the Institutional Review Board (IRB) process for these types of studies?
  • How do we get clinical educators on board and properly trained to be guiding their
    clinical education with SoTL in mind?
  • What journals publish SoTL in clinical education work?
  • Are there mentoring opportunities for someone wanting to get started in this research?

Can you discuss the application of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) in clinical
education?

  • Clinical education acknowledges the amount of educational effort
    in developing professional skills. The term supervision does not quite
    acknowledge the same level of contribution to students’ education.
  • Evidence-based education is related to evidence-based practice, which
    is the foundation of clinical practice in our field.
  • “Evidence-based” should ground all of the work that we do as teachers
    and supervisors/preceptors in supporting our learners. The evidence
    base that we refer to in our classroom teaching is very different from
    [that in] our clinical teaching. Thus, it is important to have a different
    designation of “evidence-based clinical education.”
  • Clinical educators may not be as well-versed in evidence-based
    education. Good news: You do not need to be an educator/researcher
    or have a research doctorate to do this work.
  • From the clinical educators’ perspective, we need to balance both
    evidence-based practice and evidence-based education. With this
    in mind, we can include our clinical educators in the scholarship of
    teaching and learning and scholarship of teaching in general. This is
    an area of great need that has been under-attended to.

What might clinical education in scholarship of clinical education and learning look like,
and where do we get started?

  • There are a lot of great intersections between evidence-based
    practice and evidence-based education and the clinical educators’
    role provides a great opportunity for collection of that evidence,
    augmenting of our understanding of that perspective.
  • An example of SoTL in the clinical setting: We provide clear guidelines
    to our students, yet it does not go the way we expect it to. We can go
    through a process with the students called think aloud. Specifically,
    we can ask them to plan a case and really verbalize how they would
    plan the evaluation for the client. Through audio and transcript, you
    can capture the students’ perspectives/themes and then compare
    that exact same data with [that of] experienced clinicians. Through
    this process, you can see what was happening in the students’ heads—
    literally—in order to understand why sometimes the evaluation planning
    was falling short, why it was sometimes successful, and how that
    compared to [planning by] experienced clinicians. Dr. Ginsberg noted
    that, as an instructor, that SoTL process really helped her to understand
    what was needed to be more explicit to the students and helped her, in
    turn, become a better clinical educator in that context.
  • With SoTL, you are not usually doing full-on experimental design—
    instead [you are] doing quasi-experimental design. The research can
    be performed without the use of a control group.
  • Going back to the example above, the research is just understanding
    what the students are thinking and experiencing—and that contributes
    a significant perspective and understanding of the clinical education
    process without necessarily having a control group or experimental
    design.

What are other data collection approaches used in the clinical setting, and how do these
compare to approaches in the classroom setting?

  • Reflective journals, focus groups, interviews, surveys, observation—
    anything that you have in front of you could be a data source.
  • You can get really creative in the type of data you can collect and how
    you collect the data. You can and should look to other disciplines.
  • SoTL is different from traditional disciplinary research in terms of the
    number of participants; it is possible to conduct SoTL research with a
    very small (n) that can have the same rigorous methods as large (n)
    studies.
  • Dr. Friberg suggested these resources: styluspub.presswarehouse.com/
    browse/book/9781620366936/SoTL-in-Action

What is the Institutional Review Board (IRB) process for these types of studies?

  • First step is to navigate your institute’s IRB and find out what the policies
    are when it comes to students.
  • There is always the concern of informed consent, and threats of
    coercion, and managing confidentiality and anonymity. It’s best to find
    resources and ask [them] to connect you with people at your institution
    to help answer questions related to these concerns.

How do we get clinical educators on board and properly trained to be guiding their
clinical education with SoTL in mind?

  • Develop communities of practice. Find like-minded colleagues within
    your institution and across institutions to help one another.
  • Find workshops, mentors to help these clinical educators find the value
    in evidence-based education.

What journals publish SoTL in clinical education work?

  • Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences and Disorders,
    The Clinical Teacher
  • ASHA Perspectives of the Special Interest Groups (SIGs 10 and 11)
  • Cross-disciplinary journals (e.g., Teaching and Learning in Medicine,
    Teaching and Learning in Nursing). When going this route, it is
    important to situate your writing in a way that lots of clinical disciplines
    could benefit from the work that you’ve done

Are there mentoring opportunities for someone wanting to get started in this research?

  • Start with your campus teaching and learning center—there is probably
    someone who is SoTL involved or SoTL curious on your campus to help
    figure out what resources and potential institutional mentors exist.
  • Talk with your faculty colleagues to see if they have interest or potential
    resources on campus or at other universities to help you get started in
    this work.
  • Ask about workshops or grants to support this kind of work.
  • Join a community that has already been established—such as SIG 10 or
    11—and use the discussion board to see who is doing this kind of work.
  • Review SoTL that has been published in your field, and consider
    contacting the authors. Same for conference/convention presenters

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