Litcius/Paper detail

Twelve tips for surgeons to maximise medical student learning in the operating theatre

Agra Dilshani Hunukumbure, Kathleen E. Leedham-Green, Abirami Rajamanoharan, Kirtan Patel, Alison Tang, Saroj Das

2021Medical Teacher16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Theatre-based learning is an essential component of undergraduate surgical education and offers a wide range of learning opportunities. However, studies have demonstrated that medical students have not always benefited from this holistic learning environment due to many reasons, including intimidation, hierarchies within the surgical environment and fear of making mistakes. The lead surgical educator's approach is an important influence on the experience and learning of their medical students. These twelve tips are aimed at surgical educators with undergraduate teaching responsibilities. This guidance is based upon evidence from literature and established theories of teaching and learning, supplemented by qualitative interviews with surgeons and medical students. The resulting tips were checked and refined by surgical teaching fellows. These learner-centred tips provide guidance on thorough induction, managing mutual expectations and approaches that optimise teaching and learning in the operating theatre. They are designed to support surgical educators in improving their students' engagement and learning experiences in this setting.

Topics & Concepts

Medical educationMedicineLearning environmentComponent (thermodynamics)Qualitative researchExperiential learningSurgical proceduresTeaching methodPsychologyProblem-based learningStructured predictionTeaching and learning centerMEDLINEOutcome (game theory)Active learning (machine learning)Medical schoolMedical psychologyFaculty developmentUndergraduate educationInnovations in Medical EducationSurgical Simulation and TrainingAnatomy and Medical Technology