# Evaluation of the “Resident as teacher” curriculum: a needs assessment in medical education at a large academic institution

**Authors:** Yi Zhen Jia, Véronique Castonguay, Carole Lambert, Jean-Michel Leduc, Nancy Dalgarno, Yi Zhen Jia, Sacha Sharp, Yi Zhen Jia

PMC · DOI: 10.12688/mep.20786.1 · 2025-03-25

## TL;DR

This study assesses the teaching needs of junior residents at Université de Montréal and finds that they want more training and resources in clinical teaching.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific teaching skills residents want to improve and highlights systemic barriers like lack of time and recognition.

## Key findings

- 80% of residents expressed interest in further teaching training, with 58% interested in a medical education elective.
- Residents identified indirect supervision and adapting feedback as key skills needing improvement.
- Lack of time was cited by 89% as the main barrier to participating in additional training.

## Abstract

Strong skills in teaching for residents contribute to increased satisfaction and improved student interest. Few opportunities in medical education are offered at the junior resident level. We aim to evaluate the needs of residents in teaching at Université de Montréal

A 19 question survey created after a literature review was sent to all 769 current PGY1 to PGY3 residents at UdeM to assess their interest and needs in various aspects of clinical teaching. Descriptive statistics were analyzed to make recommendations for improvements in medical education training.

We received 65 completed surveys (8.5% response rate), mostly in family and internal medicine. Eighty percent of participants were interested in further training in teaching and 58% were interested in a medical education elective. Main skills to be improved are indirect supervision and adapting feedback to different learners. Lack of time was considered by most responders (89%) as the main factor limiting participation in further training. Narrative comments noted the lack of information on medical education resources and lack of recognition by faculty compared to clinical performance or research, particularly in family medicine.

Protected time for varied medical education activities is needed, including better offers for an elective rotation. Information on currently available resources should be more widely circulated. Promoting and recognizing teaching and reserving time for direct supervision by faculty of teaching by junior residents should be encouraged.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Rattus norvegicus (brown rat, species) [taxon 10116]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12553972