DASH_Short Who is the instructor being evaluated?* PaulFrankish Tanya.Supak Corrine.Piercy Andrew.Dickinson Stacey.McEachern Julie.Ringuette Tracey.Murphy Kavish.Chandra Jamie.Riley Sue.Benjamin Janet.Vautour Paul.Page shelleycaines ElnaHauman Sabrina Veronique.Jean Pierre.Tremblay Melissa.Savoie Ian Matt.Greer Nicholas MacLean Pierre Tremblay simon.savoie vincent.moreau cherie.adams daniel.doucette Julie Savoie first name last name Jessica Thibault Yves Mazerolle Tracey Chesser-Murphy leisa.ouellet@horizonnb.ca hariokum@yahoo.ca Michelle.Foran@horizonnb.ca What is your role? Étudiant Instructeur Notateur Choose the option that best describes your role as an evaluator. Choose; - Student if the person you are evaluating was your instructor - Instructor if you're applying this evaluation to yourself. - Rater if you are training the instructor. Ce champ est caché lors de l'affichage du formulaireInstructor Filter*Rate the quality of the debriefing using the following effectiveness scale on six Elements. Element 1 allows you to rate the introduction to the simulation course and will not be rated if you do not observe the introduction. The Elements encompass Dimensions and Behaviors pertinent to the debriefing as defined in the DASH Rater’s Handbook. Within each Element, the debriefing may range from outstanding to detrimental. Please note that the overall Element score is not derived by averaging scores for individual Dimensions or Behaviors. Think holistically and not arithmetically as you consider the cumulative impact of the Dimensions, which may not bear equal weight. You, the rater, weight dimensions as you see fit based on your holistic view of the Element. If a Dimension is impossible to assess (e.g., how well an upset participant is handled during a debriefing if no one got upset), skip it and don’t let that influence your evaluation.Element 1: Establishes an engaging learning environment.Veuillez saisir un nombre entre 1 et 7.• Clarifies course objectives, environment, confidentiality, roles, and expectations. • Establishes a “fiction contract” with participants. • Attends to logistical details. • Conveys a commitment to respecting learners and understanding their perspective.Element 2: Maintains an engaging learning environment.Veuillez saisir un nombre entre 1 et 7.• Clarifies debriefing objectives, roles, and expectations. • Helps participants engage in a limited-realism context. • Conveys respect for learners and concern for their psychological safety.Element 3: Structures the debriefing in an organized way.Veuillez saisir un nombre entre 1 et 7.• Encourages trainees to express their reactions and, if needed, orients them to what happened in the simulation, near the beginning. • Guides analysis of the trainees’ performance during the middle of the session. • Collaborates with participants to summarize learning from the session near the end.Element 4: Provokes engaging discussion.Veuillez saisir un nombre entre 1 et 7.• Uses concrete examples and outcomes as the basis for inquiry and discussion. • Reveals own reasoning and judgments. • Facilitates discussion through verbal and non-verbal techniques. • Uses video, replay, and review devices (if available). • Recognizes and manages the upset participant.Element 5: Identifies and explores performance gapsVeuillez saisir un nombre entre 1 et 7.• Provides feedback on performance. • Explores the source of the performance gap.Element 6: Helps trainees achieve or sustain good future performance.Veuillez saisir un nombre entre 1 et 7.• Helps close the performance gap through discussion and teaching. • Demonstrates firm grasp of the subject. • Meets the important objectives of the session. Retour