Simulated students: A new method for studying clinical precepting
- Resource Type
- Authors
- Jonathan Ellen; Angelo Giardino; Keith Edinburgh; Jack Ende
- Source
- Teaching and Learning in Medicine. 6:132-135
- Subject
- Pediatric emergency
Medical education
Process (engineering)
business.industry
education
Perspective (graphical)
Clinical reasoning
General Medicine
Case presentation
humanities
Education
Medicine
Faculty development
business
- Language
- ISSN
- 1040-1334
The purpose of this study was to explore the utility of a simulated student for research in clinical precepting. A second‐year medical student was trained to simulate a case presentation in a pediatric emergency department. The simulation was tested on seven third‐year postgraduate pediatric residents. All encounters were videotaped; precepting interactions were transcribed. The simulation was found to be realistic and to provide a unique perspective on the precepting process. It permitted examination of several assumptions about precepting, including precepting as a means for demonstrating clinical reasoning and precepting as an opportunity for encouraging problem solving. Along with its use as a tool for faculty development, the simulated‐student technique is a useful instrument for advancing our understanding of precepting as a process.