Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices

Abstract Background The aim of this study was to investigate the acceptance and assessment of work shadowing carried out by students and dentists in dental practices. Furthermore, the extent to which students perceive an improvement in their specialised, communication and social competencies, was to...

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Main Authors: Stefan J. Heitkamp, Stefan Rüttermann, Susanne Gerhardt-Szép
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-05-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1220-4
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spelling doaj-8d2605f2220645e98a4f241658f61c6e2020-11-25T02:02:26ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202018-05-0118111410.1186/s12909-018-1220-4Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practicesStefan J. Heitkamp0Stefan Rüttermann1Susanne Gerhardt-Szép2Department of Operative Dentistry, Dental School (Carolinum), Goethe-University FrankfurtDepartment of Operative Dentistry, Dental School (Carolinum), Goethe-University FrankfurtDepartment of Operative Dentistry, Dental School (Carolinum), Goethe-University FrankfurtAbstract Background The aim of this study was to investigate the acceptance and assessment of work shadowing carried out by students and dentists in dental practices. Furthermore, the extent to which students perceive an improvement in their specialised, communication and social competencies, was to be examined. Methods 61 dental students in their clinical semesters at a German university participated in work shadowing placements at 27 different general dental practices. Before beginning, they received checklists of various competencies that they self-assessed using school grades (from 1 = ‘very good’, to 6 = ‘failed’), which they also repeated after completion. The dentists supplemented this with their external assessments. In addition, the students were requested to fill out a 54-item questionnaire and compose a freely-structured report after the work shadowing; the dentists filled out a questionnaire containing 16 items. The statistical analysis was carried out by means of the Friedman Test, including a post-hoc test (Bonferroni-Holm correction). Results The analysis showed a significant overall improvement in the students’ self-assessed competencies by 0.71* ± 0.43 grades. With an average of 0.33* ± 0.36, the dentists’ external assessment proved significantly higher than the self-assessment. The greatest improvements were perceived by the students in the areas of accounting (1.17* ± 0.77), practice organisation (1.05* ± 0.61) and dentist’s discussions (0.94* ±0.80) [*p < 0.05]. The students confirmed experiencing an expansion of knowledge, an improvement in their communication skills and indicated a high degree of satisfaction in regard to the dentists (school grade 1.58 ± 0.93). A maximum amount of satisfaction towards the work shadow students was demonstrated by the dentists, and this form of teaching was assessed with a school grade of 1.69 ± 0.89. Conclusion Both students and dental practitioners demonstrated a high level of satisfaction in regard to the work shadowing. The students felt their knowledge had increased, viewed the dentists as motivating role models and acknowledged a significant improvement in their specialised, communication and social competencies. Work shadowing in dental teaching practices presents a sensible addition to academic teaching at a university.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1220-4Dental trainingWork shadowingMedical traineeshipGeneral dental practiceEvaluationMulti-modal feedback
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefan J. Heitkamp
Stefan Rüttermann
Susanne Gerhardt-Szép
spellingShingle Stefan J. Heitkamp
Stefan Rüttermann
Susanne Gerhardt-Szép
Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices
BMC Medical Education
Dental training
Work shadowing
Medical traineeship
General dental practice
Evaluation
Multi-modal feedback
author_facet Stefan J. Heitkamp
Stefan Rüttermann
Susanne Gerhardt-Szép
author_sort Stefan J. Heitkamp
title Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices
title_short Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices
title_full Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices
title_fullStr Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices
title_full_unstemmed Work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices
title_sort work shadowing in dental teaching practices: evaluation results of a collaborative study between university and general dental practices
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Background The aim of this study was to investigate the acceptance and assessment of work shadowing carried out by students and dentists in dental practices. Furthermore, the extent to which students perceive an improvement in their specialised, communication and social competencies, was to be examined. Methods 61 dental students in their clinical semesters at a German university participated in work shadowing placements at 27 different general dental practices. Before beginning, they received checklists of various competencies that they self-assessed using school grades (from 1 = ‘very good’, to 6 = ‘failed’), which they also repeated after completion. The dentists supplemented this with their external assessments. In addition, the students were requested to fill out a 54-item questionnaire and compose a freely-structured report after the work shadowing; the dentists filled out a questionnaire containing 16 items. The statistical analysis was carried out by means of the Friedman Test, including a post-hoc test (Bonferroni-Holm correction). Results The analysis showed a significant overall improvement in the students’ self-assessed competencies by 0.71* ± 0.43 grades. With an average of 0.33* ± 0.36, the dentists’ external assessment proved significantly higher than the self-assessment. The greatest improvements were perceived by the students in the areas of accounting (1.17* ± 0.77), practice organisation (1.05* ± 0.61) and dentist’s discussions (0.94* ±0.80) [*p < 0.05]. The students confirmed experiencing an expansion of knowledge, an improvement in their communication skills and indicated a high degree of satisfaction in regard to the dentists (school grade 1.58 ± 0.93). A maximum amount of satisfaction towards the work shadow students was demonstrated by the dentists, and this form of teaching was assessed with a school grade of 1.69 ± 0.89. Conclusion Both students and dental practitioners demonstrated a high level of satisfaction in regard to the work shadowing. The students felt their knowledge had increased, viewed the dentists as motivating role models and acknowledged a significant improvement in their specialised, communication and social competencies. Work shadowing in dental teaching practices presents a sensible addition to academic teaching at a university.
topic Dental training
Work shadowing
Medical traineeship
General dental practice
Evaluation
Multi-modal feedback
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1220-4
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