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Assessing the Teaching of Procedural Skills: Can Cognitive- Task-Analysis Add to our Traditional Teaching Methods? Maura Sullivan, PhD, Adrian Ortega,

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Presentation on theme: "Assessing the Teaching of Procedural Skills: Can Cognitive- Task-Analysis Add to our Traditional Teaching Methods? Maura Sullivan, PhD, Adrian Ortega,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Assessing the Teaching of Procedural Skills: Can Cognitive- Task-Analysis Add to our Traditional Teaching Methods? Maura Sullivan, PhD, Adrian Ortega, MD, Nir Wasserberg, MD, Howard Kaufman, MD, Julie Nyquist, PhD, Richard Clark, EdD University of Southern California

2 Cognitive-Task-Analysis (CTA) Extends traditional task analysis to capture information about both the overt observable behavior and the covert cognitive functions behind it to form an integrated whole. Schraagen, Chipman & Shalin, 2000

3 Acquiring Expertise Declarative vs. Procedural Knowledge Cognitive Associative Autonomous

4 Expertise  Expertise is highly automated Ericsson, et al. 2006; Gagne et al. 1993; Clark & Estes, 1996  Automaticity interferes with articulation Clark et al., 2007, Feldon, 2004, Crandall & Getchell-Reitter, 1993, Chao & Salvendy, 1994  Learners need to be taught decision making strategies Ericsson et al., 2006; Clark et al. 2007

5 Expertise cont.  Experts underestimate novice difficulty Hinds, 1999  Experts not fully aware of 70% of own decisions Clark & Elen, 2006; Feldon & Clark, 2006  Experts’ decisions can be put into training materials Merrill, 2002; Schaafstal et al. 2000

6 CTA Gains  Overt observable behavior Deconstruct automated knowledge into concrete steps  Covert cognitive functions Identification of decision points throughout procedure Options related to each decision point  Ability to gain consensus amongst experts Provide residents with an advanced organizer

7 Purpose  To determine if surgeons omit relevant steps and decision points when teaching a colonoscopy  To determine if CTA can augment our traditional teaching methods

8 Methods  Three experts videotaped teaching a colonoscopy followed by “free recall”  Participated in CTA  Procedural Checklist and Cognitive Demands Checklist created  Videotape transcriptions transposed and omitted steps identified

9 Results “What” to do 26-step Procedure 14 Decision Points Surgeon A61%43% Surgeon B46%25% Surgeon C50%38%

10 Results cont. 26-step Procedure 14 Decision Points Surgeon A61% (50%)43% Surgeon B46% (30%)25% Surgeon C50% (26%)38% “What” to do “How to” do it

11 Conclusions  Experts did not articulate all relevant steps while teaching a colonoscopy or during free recall  CTA provides a means to capture omitted steps and decision points during traditional teaching

12 Limitations  Small N # of experts # of cases observed  No established “Gold Standard”  No inter-coder reliability

13 Future Studies  Quantify educational effectiveness  Determine number of experts needed  Determine number of cases required  Establish reliability  Accelerate the learning curve

14 Implications  CTA can be used to develop more comprehensive curricula for teaching procedural skills  Assures exposure to all steps/decisions involved in a procedure  More complete training of residents

15 mesulliv@usc.edu (323) 442-2368


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