# Pearls of Wisdom from Teaching Rounds: Reconceptualizing “See One, Do One” as Social Learning

**Authors:** Jessica R. Newman, Dorothy Hughes

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s40670-024-02184-9 · 2024-10-01

## TL;DR

This study explores how medical students observe and learn from faculty during teaching rounds, identifying key traits that create effective learning environments.

## Contribution

The study reconceptualizes traditional teaching methods by identifying specific faculty traits that enhance clinical learning through social learning.

## Key findings

- Three primary themes emerged: Attributes, Autonomy, and Achieving Engagement.
- Students valued traits like clear expectations, mentorship, humor, and humility in faculty.
- Experiential learning during teaching rounds is transformative for developing physicians.

## Abstract

Experiential education is paramount to clinical instruction in medicine. During teaching rounds, faculty can assess medical knowledge and clinical reasoning while modeling evidence-based patient care and effective communication. This study aimed to describe observed traits common across faculty who contribute to favorable learning environments.

Students completed an Internal Medicine (IM) Student Chief elective at a midwestern United States Academic Tertiary Care Center in which M4s aided Clerkship leadership in near-peer teaching and communicating with students. Chiefs participated in rounds for experiential learning in clinical teaching. For this qualitative, descriptive study, M4s were asked to provide at least three “pearls of wisdom,” on observations about teaching and learning in reflective essays during two consecutive academic years. Twenty-nine M4s participated in the elective and submitted 238 pearls. The research team undertook document review and qualitatively analyzed content of Chiefs’ reflective essays. Detailed codes were organized into primary and secondary themes by each author, and then re-evaluated until they reached consensus. Through thematic analysis, we identified faculty traits students found conducive to learning.

Three primary themes emerged: Attributes, Autonomy, and Achieving Engagement.

Experiential educational encounters are transformative to developing new physicians. Chiefs highlighted positive aspects of teaching rounds described previously including providing clear expectations, promoting goal setting, engagement, and instilling confidence. They also valued humor, recognizing cognitive overload, displaying humility, listening skills, and mentorship. While one attending cannot replicate all described effective techniques simultaneously, faculty development that promotes refining these approaches may improve the clinical learning environment for all learners.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11933502