APPRAISALS
IN CLINICAL GENETICS
What is appraisal?
Appraisal is an ongoing confidential
process. It is a series of meetings
between trainee and trainer (the educational supervisor) that is primarily
educational and focussed on the trainee and their personal and professional
needs. As appraisal is a one to one
confidential tool, any documentation arising from it should not be used to
inform any formal assessment processes unless specifically agreed by both
parties.
Who
organises the appraisal?
When the clinical genetic specialist registrars were asked in 1999, it
was the appraisal that was the thing that was not happening on a regular basis. It
is recommended that to ensure appraisals happen, the onus for organising them be
put onto the specialist registrars who have a right to confidential appraisal
during protected time (around 45 minutes recommended).
Who does the appraisal?
The trainee’s educational supervisor usually does the appraisal for
that year of their training, or that particular part of a rotation.
How often should appraisals occur? Appraisal needs to be performed at the beginning, middle and
end of each year or part of the rotation. At
the beginning a plan should be made as to what the trainee wants to achieve
during the following months. The
middle appraisal reflects a check on progress and allows time for a change of
direction if things are not going as well as they might.
The appraisal at the end of the year or part of rotation can review what
has been achieved and set goals for the next phase of training. Appraisals should be occurring at least six monthly.
What should happen during an appraisal?
During an appraisal the specialist registrar and education supervisor
should discuss training objectives, case mix for the coming months, planning
attendance at meetings and courses and monitoring development of case reports,
projects etc.
A suggested outline for an appraisal
à
Review the specialist registrar’s previous experience for those
new to Clinical Genetics, patient numbers/case mix for those already entered in
training.
à
Review goals achieved and difficulties encountered since previous
review.
à
Plan for the next six months:
à
Complete and sign appraisal form
Reports
for RITA assessments
– The only documentation from appraisals
routinely submitted to the RITA are the forms in appendix 1, recording the
appraisal took place and the objectives for the next training period. The
educational supervisor must provide a separate assessment summary for the
assessment panel. The whole point
of regular appraisals, is that the trainee becomes aware if the supervisor does
perceive problems and is having continuing help throughout the year trying to
remedy them rather than being surprised to learn about them at the RITA.
Conversely if the trainee perceives problems these can be addressed.
What
should the SpR do is appraisal is difficult to organise?
- In this situation, the SpR should first approach the regional
speciality advisor or programme director. If problems still exist following
this, the SpR should contact the postgraduate Dean.