Finding our Voice: Evaluation of Goal Setting Using the Habits of Preceptors Rubric in Terms of Focus, "SMARTness," and Impact.

J Contin Educ Health Prof

Dr. Wolken: Clinical Pharmacist, Ambulatory Care, Covenant Medical Group, Knoxville, TN. Dr. Larson: Director, Office of Experiential Education, Midwestern University College of Pharmacy, Glendale Campus, Glendale, AZ. Dr. Raney: Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Midwestern University College of Pharmacy, Glendale Campus, Glendale, AZ. Dr. Pogge: Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Midwestern University College of Pharmacy, Glendale Campus, Glendale, AZ. Dr. Afolabi: Associate Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Midwestern University College of Pharmacy, Glendale Campus, Glendale, AZ. Dr. Storjohann: Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Midwestern University College of Pharmacy, Glendale Campus, Glendale, AZ. Dr. Fairman: Associate Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Midwestern University College of Pharmacy, Glendale Campus, Glendale, AZ. Dr. Davis: Cardiology Director, Internal Medicine Field Medical Group, Pfizer Medical Affairs, New York, NY, and Adjunct Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice, Midwestern University College of Pharmacy, Glendale Campus, Glendale, AZ.

Published: November 2023

Introduction: Effective leadership propels teams from effectiveness to greatness and is accomplished when everyone achieves and contributes their full potential, or "voice." The Clinician Educators Program Teaching and Learning Curriculum fosters preceptor development using the Habits of Preceptors Rubric (HOP-R) to guide participants in finding their precepting "voice." After the HOP-R self-assessment, participants select a habit of focus (HOF) and craft a SMART (specific/measurable/achievable/relevant/time-bound) goal. This report describes a pilot rubric, SMART-EP (emotional intelligence(EI)/professionalism), exploring goal "SMARTness" alongside change (impact) in participants' perceived precepting capabilities.

Methods: HOP-R self-ratings (2018-2020) and HOF/SMART goals (2019-2020) were retrospectively reviewed by two raters. Perceived preceptor capabilities were measured by analyzing the change in self-assessed habit level ratings between the first/fourth-quarter surveys. SMART goals were categorized by HOF and inclusion of SMART-EP components. Participants were guided in the inclusion of SMART, but not -EP, components.

Results: In aggregate, 120 participants completed HOP-R surveys (2018-2020). Within-subject changes across all 11 habits were significant ( P < .001). For the SMART-EP rubric analysis (2019-2020), 71 participants had an average "SMARTness" score of 3.92 (of 5) with corresponding interrater reliability of 0.91. Goals included 2.77 (of 4) EI traits and 1.72 (of 3) professionalism components.

Discussion: The SMART-EP rubric provided insights into preceptor development opportunities among participants. Beyond SMART components, participants often included elements of EI and professionalism. Ratings confirm and support the consistency of the HOP-R as a tool to assess precepting habits.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CEH.0000000000000540DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

habits preceptors
8
preceptors rubric
8
preceptor development
8
components participants
8
smart-ep rubric
8
participants
7
rubric
5
hop-r
5
finding voice
4
voice evaluation
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!