|
Principles of Clinical Evaluation
*
Preceptors sometimes neglect the
evaluation aspect of the preceptor role because they "don't want to
be the one to fail the student. But, preceptors don't fail
students or stall student's progress. Instead, a student's
performance meets, or fails to meet, criteria. As a
preceptor, you are in a better position than anyone else to collect
the data that gives evidence of student competence. And, as a
preceptor, you have an opportunity to support professional practice
standards and the credibility of the school of nursing.
Think of yourself as a
video-recorder: recording student performance and playing it
back to compare with standards, to clarify and validate with
faculty, and to give feedback to the student. The student's
response to your corrective feedback becomes part of your
evaluation data.
Keep in mind that your primary role
is teaching. In the teaching process you will observe student
practice and, in consultation with the faculty member, fit those
observations into the evaluation framework.
Evaluating has two
components:
- Identifying opportunities for
improvement--both in the student's performance and in preceptor's
teaching technique
- Summarizing patterns and trends in
overall performance and comparing performance with
standard
* Adapted, with permission, from
Case, Betty. (1999). Advanced Practice Nurse Preceptor
Workbook. Chicago: Niehoff School of Nursing,
University of Chicago.
|