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The Relationship Between Athletic Training Program Directors Self-Reported Leadership Style and Program SuccessWalters, Elizabeth 20 July 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Experiences of Residency Program Directors in Their Roles: Exploring Well-Being Through Burnout and EngagementRobertson, Kyle A. 11 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Recent literature on well-being of physicians in general, and residency program directors (PD) specifically, has demonstrated those meeting the criteria of burnout reaching almost 50% in physicians, and 20-30% in PDs. However, few studies have explored engagement, or the positive or meaningful aspects, in physicians and no studies have explored engagement in the PD and Assistant PD community. Therefore, this study employed a qualitative approach to explore the experiences of PDs and APDs as they encountered burnout, engagement, and every combination in between through their multifaceted, roles, responsibilities, and tasks embedded in their institutional context and personal lives.
Phase 1 participants (n=3) included two PDs and one APD from Indiana University School of Medicine (IUSM). Participants in Phase 1 took part in three semi-structured interviews at 6-month intervals, and direct observations in their clinical, administrative, and education roles. Phase 2 participants (n=5) were PDs from IUSM who completed a single semi-structured interview based on preliminary results and exploration of Phase 1 participants’ experiences. Interviews and field notes from observations were analyzed using inductive thematic analysis, followed by a deductive application of Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) theory. Document analysis was incorporated to add context, understanding, and a rich description of the participants’ experiences. This study found multiple sub-themes situated within four major themes: It Takes a Village, Integration of the “Hats” They Wear, Motivation and the Meaning of Their Career, and Coping. Exploring the sub-themes to JD-R theory allowed contextualization of how job demands, job resources, personal resources, absence of resources, job crafting, recovery, self-undermining, and strain, interact to add context, nuance, and broader conceptualization of how PD and APD experienced their multifaceted roles.
This study provides a rich description of the experiences of PDs and APDs embedded in their social context of roles, tasks, and responsibilities. These results indicated that understanding how the individual experiences their job demands as they interact with their experiences of job and personal resources, and how the individual proactively engages with their environment through job crafting and recovery enables for a nuanced appreciation of engagement and burnout.
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The Career Success of Paramedic Program DirectorsBryan, Cornelia A. 16 June 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Empowerment of the Clinical Education Coordinator in the CAATE-Accredited Entry-Level Athletic Training Education ProgramsClark, Johanna M. 29 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Making Sense of Medical Education: An Examination of Contraception Counselling, Unplanned Pregnancy Counselling, and Abortion Services Curricula in Ontario Medical SchoolsPerkins-Ceccato, Natalie 17 February 2011 (has links)
Background: To date, little information exists about contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services curricula in Ontario medical schools. Identifying existing curricula, including influences on whether and how curricula are delivered, is an essential starting point for evaluative processes.
Purpose and Objectives: The purpose of this study was to explore contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services curricula in Ontario medical schools. The objectives were to 1) identify the existence of such curricula in undergraduate (preclinical, obstetrics and gynecology clerkship, and family medicine clerkship) and post-graduate (obstetrics and gynecology and family medicine) programs; and 2) explore factors influencing the existence and form of these curricula from the perspective of program directors.
Design: An exploratory qualitative approach was used for this study whereby, Ontario program directors responsible for contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services curricula were interviewed.
Results: Overall, the inclusion of routine curricula in contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services was limited and variable between schools, as well as within clerkship and post-graduate programs. Program directors were often uncertain about
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whether such routine curricula were present in their programs. Four factors were found to influence whether these curricula were included in a program: 1) program structure, 2) program resources, 3) the interests of residents/students, and 4) personal philosophy of the program director. A typology was developed to understand how program directors resolved uncertainty when asked about the existence of these curricula in their programs. The emergent sensemaking typology revealed strategies used by directors to either justify the current system of medical teaching (i.e., defending the status quo) or support change (i.e., responsive). Program directors were consistent across programs in terms of the factors they identified as influencing the curriculum offered. The perceived impact of these factors varied according to the sensemaking processes employed by each director.
Conclusions: This study provides an outline of curriculum variability within and between medical school programs. Further, if offers a typology of the ways program directors explain their uncertainty regarding the inclusion of these curricula in their programs. In so doing, program director sensemaking as a key influence on the curriculum is revealed.
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Making Sense of Medical Education: An Examination of Contraception Counselling, Unplanned Pregnancy Counselling, and Abortion Services Curricula in Ontario Medical SchoolsPerkins-Ceccato, Natalie 17 February 2011 (has links)
Background: To date, little information exists about contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services curricula in Ontario medical schools. Identifying existing curricula, including influences on whether and how curricula are delivered, is an essential starting point for evaluative processes.
Purpose and Objectives: The purpose of this study was to explore contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services curricula in Ontario medical schools. The objectives were to 1) identify the existence of such curricula in undergraduate (preclinical, obstetrics and gynecology clerkship, and family medicine clerkship) and post-graduate (obstetrics and gynecology and family medicine) programs; and 2) explore factors influencing the existence and form of these curricula from the perspective of program directors.
Design: An exploratory qualitative approach was used for this study whereby, Ontario program directors responsible for contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services curricula were interviewed.
Results: Overall, the inclusion of routine curricula in contraception counselling, unplanned pregnancy counselling, and abortion services was limited and variable between schools, as well as within clerkship and post-graduate programs. Program directors were often uncertain about
iii
whether such routine curricula were present in their programs. Four factors were found to influence whether these curricula were included in a program: 1) program structure, 2) program resources, 3) the interests of residents/students, and 4) personal philosophy of the program director. A typology was developed to understand how program directors resolved uncertainty when asked about the existence of these curricula in their programs. The emergent sensemaking typology revealed strategies used by directors to either justify the current system of medical teaching (i.e., defending the status quo) or support change (i.e., responsive). Program directors were consistent across programs in terms of the factors they identified as influencing the curriculum offered. The perceived impact of these factors varied according to the sensemaking processes employed by each director.
Conclusions: This study provides an outline of curriculum variability within and between medical school programs. Further, if offers a typology of the ways program directors explain their uncertainty regarding the inclusion of these curricula in their programs. In so doing, program director sensemaking as a key influence on the curriculum is revealed.
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The Interdisciplinary Collaborative Competency in Music Therapy: Terminology, Definitions, and Teaching ApproachesSpring, Erin K. 05 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Athletic Training Education ReformHanson, Caroline E. January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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