Attending and Resident Educator Resources

Articles for Medical Students – The following folders contain articles helpful for 3rd and 4th-year medical students. These can be given to students for additional reading on a topic after the day is complete or during downtime in the hospital or clinic.
Adult Neurology
- Neuromuscular
- Stroke
- Epilepsy
- Neuroimmunology
- Cognitive
- Movement Disorders
Child Neurology
PM&R
Professional Development
Feedback
- Written Evaluations - Below are some helpful tips to making your student evaluations more accurate, meaningful and actionable:
- 1. Make sure you arrange for time to observe the student and take notes to help you write the evaluation later. You can ask the student to present a patient, present research they completed about a case, perform part of the physical examination for you etc.
- 2. Instead of writing "I didn’t work with the student long enough to give good feedback," please try to provide any observations you have, even if brief. Your insights are valuable.
- 3. Ensure your evaluation is consistent. If you note that a student needed prompting in activities, avoid stating in comments that "the student did not need prompting with any clinical skills."
- 4. If you feel you cannot adequately evaluate a student, it is okay to refrain from completing an evaluation. We will follow up for your feedback if needed.
- 5. Use balanced language in narratives. Instead of "always" or "never," consider terms like "required some," "minimal," or "occasional" prompting.
- 6. Remember, competencies are based on 3rd and 4th-year students. Rating a student in the highest categories indicates they are functioning at the level of a 4th-year student ready to be an intern.
- 7. Avoid giving uniform scores (e.g., 70, 85, or 100) across all areas. Students typically excel in some areas and may need improvement in others. Please read the prompts describing student behavior carefully and be sure to record your observations appropriately.
Thank you for your careful and thoughtful evaluations.
Oral Feedback to students
Make sure you arrange time with each student you work with to give 1:1 feedback. This should be brief lasting 5-10 minutes. Tell the student “I am giving you feedback.” Focus on only 1-2 points. Ask the student what they did well. Tell them your observations. Ask them what they feel they could improve on and tell them your observations. Work with them to develop strategies to improve. Use this website to point them to concrete sources for their continued development.
[Insert Feedback WINS form] - Use this guide to record your observations of student performance and the accompanying script to discuss your feedback with students.
Education CME modules through ACE – Alliance for Clinical Educators (ACE) is a multidisciplinary group formed to enhance clinical instruction of medical students. The following link contains a clinical faculty development series containing multiple lectures to develop clinical educators.
Neurology Education Journal – An AAN publication focusing on research within the field of neuroscience education.
- Outstanding Educators
- Evaluator of Distinction Awardees - After each rotation, our grading committee carefully reviews all medical student evaluations and selects one resident and one attending physician who consistently demonstrated high-quality effort and provided meaningful and actionable feedback for students to receive this award.
- 2023-2024 (The following can be listed instead of tabs to be clicked on)
- R7
- Resident: Dr. Timothy Nguyen
- Attending: Dr. Shea Wright [Eval_winner_Wright]
- R8
- Resident: Dr. Niki Nanavaty
- Attending: Dr. Katrina Peariso
- R9
- Resident: Dr. Maddie Ring
- Attending: Dr. Eileen Broomall
- R10
- Resident: Dr. Katherine Knox-Concepcion
- Attending: Dr. Long Davalos
- R11
- Resident: Dr. Sam Marcucci
- Faculty: Dr. Lauren Menzies
- R7
- 2023-2024 (The following can be listed instead of tabs to be clicked on)
- John G. Quinlan Teaching Award Recipients (The following can be listed instead of tabs to be clicked on)
- 2023-2024 [Insert Picture- [JQ_WINNERS]]
- Resident: Dr. Ali Eltatawy
- Attending: Dr. Jonathan Smith
- 2023-2024 [Insert Picture- [JQ_WINNERS]]
- Evaluator of Distinction Awardees - After each rotation, our grading committee carefully reviews all medical student evaluations and selects one resident and one attending physician who consistently demonstrated high-quality effort and provided meaningful and actionable feedback for students to receive this award.
Popular Links:
UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute
Contact Us
Department ofNeurology and Rehabilitation Medicine
Stetson Building Suite 2300
260 Stetson Street
Cincinnati, OH 45267-0525
Mail Location: 0525
Academic Phone: 513-558-2968
Academic Fax: 513-558-4887
Academic Email: neurology@uc.edu
Clinic Phone: 513-475-8730
Clinic Fax: 513-475-8033