Domain3
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Domain3
Standardized Assessment and the EMS Educator UPDATE EDUCATOR ® Winter 2010 The Official Publication of the National Association of EMS Educators Discipline Expertise - Part II w Save The Date: Symposium 2010 It’s All What You Study w Educational Test Design: An Intro & Overview Plus: NAEMSE is Going Green D N A G N I T S E T E C N A M R O F PER 3 N AI M E O D SID IN IN THIS ISSUE D N A G N TESTI MANCE R O F R PE 20 Standardized Assessment and the EMS Educator Also 4 7 12 15 16 29 31 President’s Perspective NAEMSE News It’s All What You Study State Spotlight: Georgia Corporate Partner News Evidence on Online Education New Year Resolutions Domain3 20 23 27 Standardized Assessment and the EMS Educator Educational Test and Design: An Introduction and Overview Discipline Expertise - Part II www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 3 PRESIDENT’S PERSPECTIVE Mentoring: Passing our Passion.....Forward By: Dr. Chris Nollette, NREMT-P, LP - President of NAEMSE 681 Andersen Drive Foster Plaza 6 Pittsburgh, PA 15220 Phone: 412-920-4775 Fax: 412-920-4780 www.naemse.org 2009-2010 Board of Directors Chris Nollette, Ed.D, NREMT-P, LP President When I was a child of seven years old, my friends, on a holiday, filled my pocket with coppers. I went directly to a shop where they sold toys for children; and being charmed with the sound of a whistle, that I met by the way in the hands of another boy, I voluntarily offered and gave all my money for one. I then came home, and went whistling all over the house, much pleased with my whistle, but disturbing all the family. My brothers, and sisters, and cousins, understanding the bargain I had made, told me I had given four times as much for it as it was worth; put me in mind what good things I might have bought with the rest of the money; and laughed at me so much for my folly, that I cried with vexation; and the reflection gave me more chagrin than the whistle gave me pleasure. -Benjamin Franklin B enjamin Franklin recounts this story from his childhood of paying too much for the whistle because he lacked the wisdom and experience to make a better choice. One could only imagine that if he had sought council before his purchase how much happier he would be in the end. If we fail to seek out mentors then we become open to making many of our own mistakes. These mistakes can be as costly as the whistle and some will cost us much more in our professional and personal lives. Think back over this year and realize how many trusted public servants and notable celebrities who have stood before the cameras and faced a world that shakes its head at how much they all paid for the whistle. Then think about those who have mentored and shaped your life as they helped you realize your dreams. Maybe they even helped to inspire you to dream in the first place – the power of mentoring. Mentoring is the very heartbeat of every profession and becomes the calling of each and every professional. We all have a duty as professionals to reach out and share our wisdom, our purpose and our passion with the next generation. This is essential to maintain and grow as a professional body in a positive and purposeful manner. How many of us owe so much to those who have come before and inspired us to see the world and ourselves so much differently? 4 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org PRESIDENT’S PERSPECTIVE CNTD. National Association of EMS Educators Donna Tidwell, BS, RN, EMT-P President-Elect Joe Grafft, MS, NREMT Secretary/Treasurer Angel Burba, MS, NREMT-P, NCEE Immediate Past President Michael Miller, B.S., EMS, R.N., NREMT-P Parliamentarian Denise Wilfong, PhD, NREMT-P Annmary Thomas, MEd, NREMT-P Scott Bourn, PhD, RN, NREMT-P Brenda Beasley, RN, BS, EMT-P Chris LeBaudour, MsEd, EMT Terry Devito, Ed.D, RN, EMT-P, MEd, EMS-1 Kim McKenna, RN, BSN, CEN, EMT-P Michael Frith, MS, EMT-P Madeleine O’Donnell, Ed.D National Office Staff Joann Freel, BS, CMP Executive Director, Editor Stephen Perdziola, BS Business Manager Laura Krawchyk, BA Educational Coordinator Beth Benson Membership Coordinator Lauren Rudenko, BA Communications Coordinator Larissa Kocelko, BA Administrative Assistant William Raynovich, MPH, NREMT-P, Ed.D Editor, Domain3 Submission Guidelines Unsolicited submissions are welcomed. Members of the NAEMSE Publications Committee review Domain3 manuscripts. Acceptance of a manuscript for publication is contingent upon completion of the editing process. Manuscripts should be e-mailed to submissions@ naemse.org. Submit a cover letter with each manuscript indicating: Author name, credentials, title, and affiliation. A title letter should also be included disclosing any commercial associations that could post a conflict of interest. If you have an idea brewing that you’d like to submit, please contact us. We would be happy to discuss it. New authors are welcome and encouraged. While mentoring is really defined as a long-term relationship, it can be for a lifetime or one can be mentored for the moment. We have all been changed by something a patient has said or has done – maybe it is true that we mentor even when we do not know we are mentoring. Many professionals who started in the 70’s and 80’s joined our profession in these early years by watching “Emergency” the show inspired a generation. Those early professionals so inspired by “Emergency” shared their passion with the next generation and grew an entire field an entire profession we know as EMS. Researchers have long stressed just how important mentoring is from a professional standpoint. It is more critical today then it was yesterday for the world is much more complicated and we see constant change to our professional landscapes. Many are fearful of asking for help for they believe that it will show them to be less capable and intelligent so they suffer in silence. The challenges before us are real and no one can have all the answers; therefore, we must depend on each other for support. Unfortunately, the world is filled with leaders who lack vision which is the foundation for mentoring. For it is through vision that we see the world not as what it is but what it can become. We realize the mistakes we have made or the opportunities that we missed and want the next generation not to follow suit. Are we better today for those men and women who mentored another generation by showing just how shortsighted we were as a people? – Mother Teresa, Ceaser Chavez, Martin Luther King, Jr., Ghandi, just to name a few. Their vision galvanized mankind to address social issues that rekindled the human spirit and created a future of great possibilities. They mentored a whole generation to believe that the world could have greater justice – an idea was born and a generation mentored to think differently – so great change became possible. name a few. The board of directors for NAEMSE is a visionary board that believes it is not enough to leave the organization in stronger financial shape but we must reach out to all our members and create tomorrows that are filled with many possibilities. We must never take comfort in what we have done but must move forward to tackle the work that is left undone. Let it be said of every professional organization – large or small – that they carefully counted out their coppers and did not pay too much for the whistle. For as we lift each other up and embrace mentoring we begin to rise ourselves and in the end we are all better for the journey – which is a harmony born of service and a price worth paying both personally and professionally. (From Left) Capt. Darryl Cleveland, Randolph Mantooth, Capt. Phil Rawlings, Dr. Chris Nollette The National Association of EMS Educators (NAEMSE) is a body of professional educators who are committed to mentoring and next year will be launching an ambitious national mentoring program on several fronts – national accreditation, field and clinical practices, administrative issues, implementation of educational standards – just to www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 5 NAEMSE NEWS Lifesaving starts here.™ NAEMSE is Going GREEN! By: Lauren Rudenko, Communications Coordinator, NAEMSE Physio-Control Learning Center in Booth 3307. Earn more Continuing Education Credits at EMS TODAY! Your job changes every day—keeping up with new trends and technologies can be some of your biggest challenges. As trends and technology evolve, Physio-Control will help you with the education you need to get your job done. Come to the Learning Center in the Physio-Control booth at EMS Today and keep up with the latest in: • STEMI • Capnography • Carbon Monoxide • Mechanical Chest Compressions ... and more! Each 30-minute session is approved for continuing education credit through CECBEMS and you will receive a certificate in the mail after the conference. For detailed session descriptions and a schedule of sessions, please visit our Web site at www.physio-control.com. ©2010 Physio-Control, Inc. Redmond, WA 98052. All rights reserved. In 2010 The National Association of EMS Educators is participating in a strong initiative of becoming more environmentally responsible in our day to day operations at our Pittsburgh, PA office. NAEMSE will be eliminating the new membership packets and introducing an e-membership flash drive in the New Year for all new members of NAEMSE. All new membership components will now be in an electronic format that can be viewed on any computer. However new members will still receive a paper membership certificate and membership card. Current members will also see a change in the way their membership renewal information is delivered. Instead of receiving 3-4 paper notifications of membership renewal, NAEMSE’s new process will consist of mailing one paper reminder and sending 2-3 electronic and one phone reminder. Just by making this small change to the way we do business at NAEMSE we will save over 200,000 sheets of paper annually – just on membership papers! Here are some other startling facts on the importance of “Going Green:” •Next time you travel, consider a permanent tag for your luggage. If travelers in the U.S. stopped using paper luggage tags during their trips, 60 million sheets of paper could be saved per year*. •Use leftover paper or plastic bags for your trash can. When one ton of plastic bags are reused, the energy equivalent of 11 barrels of oil is saved, and 17 trees are spared*. •In the course of a year, if everyone in the US composted their kitchen scraps instead of sending them to the trash, the organic waste diverted from landfills would cover the entire city of San Francisco*. •If just 10 percent of U.S. households attached shut off nozzles to their outdoor hoses, we’d save enough water to fill over 128,000 bathtubs – everyday*. aware of the paper, power and printing that are used in the office. Our goal is to try our very best during our day to day operations to help better the environment and the association’s future. We hope that the members of NAEMSE will support us in our new procedures and contribute to making NAEMSE a green-friendly association. *ATTRIBUTION: Information loosely based on collective research from “Our Planet- Change is Possible” by Jeca Taudte and Tom Anderson and GREEN IT. MEAN IT. FOX. NAEMSE NEWS Great Resource for NAEMSE Members FiledBy is the most comprehensive online directory of book authors on the Internet. Every published author, co-author or other listed contributor to a book in every subject category with an active ISBN in the U.S. & Canada has a free listing/website which they can claim and customize. Any EMS professional who has published a book in any subject area should have a listing/website already on FiledBy. There is no fee or obligation to claim a listing/website. Once customized, an author’s website will share prominent registry space with thousands of other authors each representing their own work, videos, podcasts, articles and other accomplishments on FiledBy. To register and verify an author listing/website please visit: www.filedby.com/signup/ The NAEMSE staff has promised to become more www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 7 MEMBER NEWS NASEMSO Mourns the Loss of David Taylor, Arkansas State EMS Director On Nov. 5, 2009, the EMS community lost a visionary leader and great friend with the unexpected death of Arkansas State EMS Director, David Taylor. NASEMSO invites all state EMS officials and partner groups to share their memories of David, share photos, and express their sympathies to his family and friends at the NASEMSO memorial site in honor of David. A memorial book will be published, composed of your memories and photos, and the book will be sent to David’s family. David started his career in emergency services as an EMT in 1989. He became a paramedic in 1991 and joined the Arkansas Department of Health on June 1, 1999 as an EMS Specialist. He served as Certification Administrator, Interim Director, and he became Director of Emergency Medical Services in April 2003. MEMBER NEWS for the Baltimore City Fire Department (BCFD) on October 10, 2009. This event, attended by Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon, local TV news personality Stan Stovall, and others, celebrates the bravery and dedication of the members of the BCFD. The McMahon Award is given in recognition of the pioneering efforts in the delivery of pre-hospital emergency medical care by Chief McMahon. A medal, certificate, and monetary award is presented by the family of Chief McMahon to an individual cited for outstanding achievement in emergency medical services (EMS). Lt. Cooper started with the BCFD in 1993, was promoted to Lieutenant in 2003, and returned from the field to work in the training academy in 2004. He has reviewed and contributed to several EMS textbooks, and in 2009, obtained recognition as a master educator by obtaining a Nationally Certified EMS Educator credential. HCC is very fortunate to have Lt. Cooper; his efforts on behalf of our students are outstanding! Congratulations to Joe Graft, recipient of The Toward Zero Deaths Star Award in Education David was a member of the Paramedic Society, Instructor Society, Arkansas EMT Association and he served as a National Registry Paramedic/Instructor. At the time of his death, he was the Southeast Regional Director, Treasurer, and Program Committee Chair for the National Association of State EMS Officials. President Steve Blessing issued this statement on behalf of NASEMSO, “David Taylor was a dedicated family man, a committed public servant, and a good friend and colleague. We were blessed by his friendship, grateful for his commitment, indebted to his experience, and honored by his presence. Our thoughts and prayers are with his beloved wife and children and all our colleagues in the Arkansas Office of EMS and Trauma. We will deeply miss him.” Please contribute your memories, comments, and photos of David to the NASEMSO memorial site in his honor. Let’s make sure that his family and friends know how much he has meant to us. Memorial web page address is: http://memorialwebsites.legacy.com/DavidTaylor/Homepage.aspx Battalion Chief Martin C. McMahon Memorial Award Recipient Lt. Jon Cooper, Howard Community College’s emergency medical services basic life support program manager, was awarded the Battalion Chief Martin C. McMahon Memorial Award during the annual Memorial Service and Medals Day 8 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org The Toward Zero Deaths Star Awards The Toward Zero Deaths Star awards are given to recognize excellence in enforcement, emergency medical and trauma services, education, engineering, child passenger safety, judicial/Court systems, and the media. Award recipients have demonstrated exceptional creativity, leadership and organizational skills and the ability to sucessfully motivate and collaborate with others in efforts to drive Minnesota toward zero deaths on its roads. The 2009 recipients in each category are listed below: Education: The recipient of this year’s Star Award in Education is Metropolitan State University School of Law Enforcement faculty member Joseph A. Grafft. Grafft has been involved in emergency medical services and education for more than 4o years and has held leadership positions with a number of emergency medical associations and committees. Including Past-president of the National Association of EMS Educators and currently is serving as Treasurer. He was responsible for the motorcycle driving program sponsored by the Minnesota Department of Public Safety, which trained more than 8.000 riders in basic and advanced motorcycle driving, and he has wroked extensively with area schools to promote seat belt use and youth safety. NAEMT Honors Brown with Lifetime Achievement Award The National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians (NAEMT) awarded the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians (NREMT) Executive Director Bill Brown, Jr., its 2009 Rocco V. Morando Lifetime Achievement Award. The award was presented on October 27 during NAEMT’s annual EMS awards ceremony. The event took place at NAEMT’s 2009 General Membership Meeting, held in conjunction with EMS EXPO 2009 in Atlanta. Coming to the stage during the awards ceremony believing he was presenting the award to someone else, Brown was completely surprised when NAEMT President Patrick Moore instead named Brown himself as the recipient of the award. The Rocco V. Morando Lifetime Achievement Award is named after EMS pioneer and NAEMT founder Morando, and represents great achievement in EMS. Considered NAEMT’s most prestigious honor, the award is presented by NAEMT and is sponsored by NREMT. “ ‘Lifetime Achievement in EMS’ is a title that is truly appropriate to attach to the name of Bill Brown,” NREMT Chairman of the Board Jimm Murray commented. “He has spent a professional career in the service of EMS and patients, first in direct medical care and then in devising systems of training and testing that aid the public. This is a most fitting match of a title and a person.” NAEMT President Patrick Moore told the audience at the awards ceremony that “Bill Brown is truly a visionary,” pointing out his heroic efforts as a Pararescueman (PJ) in Vietnam, his assistance of refugees from Hurricane Katrina, contributions in shaping the national EMS system and guiding the NREMT. “A long time ago in Vietnam, I recognized my mission would be to continue the Pararescue mission — ‘That Others May Live’,” Brown commented as he accepted the award. He said his purpose with the NREMT is about EMS provider competency and safety of the public, with a side goal of bettering EMS. In comments Brown later wrote in a forum to his staff, he said in part, “Perhaps I will never be able to say enough “thanks” to so many people who have made my life so meaningful...The NREMT is what it is today because of the teamwork we accomplish with our stakeholders, Board Members and staff. We will all only be able to pass through life one time. For those of us who have chosen the mission to help others, both directly and indirectly, life has the flavor others will never know. It is not a “one-man” mission, it is a team…” Brown’s complete biography can be found at www.nremt.org under About the NREMT/Staff Biographies. Mr. Brown has been a member of NAEMSE since 2002. INSTRUCTOR COURSE NAEMSE continues to bring its heralded EMS instructor course to all corners of the country. If you haven’t yet attended, reserve your spot online, or if you’re an instructor course veteran, spread the good news to your colleagues in the EMS business. This Winter, courses will be held in: San Diego, CA and Savannah, GA. For more information, visit www.naemse.org. MEMBER DISCOUNTS Magna Fortis is pleased to support NAEMSE for the 2009-2010 academic year. NAEMSE members faculty, staff, and students (individually or collectively) are authorized to use 2009-2010 NAEMSE academic code number 515405 to open Magna Fortis academic store to obtain academically licensed, and subsidized special academic pricing on stethoscopes for use in NAEMSE-member EMS training programs. Access to Magna Fortis academic store requires coded entry, online: 1} Go to www.magnafortis.com 2} Enter Code: [ 515405 ] in text box; 3} Click [Apply] button. Academically discounted Magna Fortis stethoscopes are the same premium quality instruments with same lifetime limited warranty as retail-priced Magna Fortis’ products. Magna Fortis’ primary goal: “Use the most advanced materials and manufacturing methods; inventively apply proven acoustic principles and craftsmanship of fine musical instrumentmaking; produce super-acoustic stethoscopes that significantly increase auscultation clarity and volume in challenging environments; warranty and support them throughout the clinician’s professional career.” The “Magna Fortis’ Academic Support Program mission is to “eliminate the disparity between ‘have’, and ‘have not’ students; level the playing field, by making the most advanced stethoscopes affordable to all EMS students; and achieve every student’s full auscultation potential. Member Discount on RN Pocket Guide Receive a 25% discount on RN Pocket Guide! Enter the promo code “NAEMSE” during checkout. Purchases can be made through the NAEMSE web site. www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 9 NAEMSE NEWS Announcement Regarding Membership Dues Increase As of January 1, 2010, a membership dues increase will go in effect as the NAEMSE Board of Directors have approved the first dues increase in several years. The cost of doing business has continued to rise in all areas of operations even though cost savings measures have been utilized. With this change in membership dues there will now only be one membership cost and that will be $85.00. You will still be able to choose electronic or paper membership, but there will be no cost difference between the two options. Dues for international membership will remain the same at $95.00 US dollars for 2010. Your great NAEMSE benefits (all benefits are available to international and domestic members) will remain the same and we plan on adding more benefits to your membership. Please visit www.naemse.org for more information. We thank you for your understanding of this increase as we continue to try to stay ahead of the rising cost of doing business. Member Spotlight: Susan A. Lencioni Reason you joined NAEMSE: I love to teach, and I’ve been a medic for a very long time. It’s time for me to give back: perhaps the experiences I have had can assist new medics in some way: teach them the ropes, help them become a better medic; regain their love for the job. I also hope to get involved in the decisions of the new standards coming out in 2012. I think the world of Para-medicine has so many possibilities: I’d like to see it realize those possibilities. Personal Hobbies: I love American History, especially the American Revolution. I also love photography, and writing fictional novels. Activities: I love being outdoors, so any outdoor activity is fine with me. I especially love to fish, hike, rock climb, and I hope to get back into SCUBA diving soon. Name: Susan A. Lencioni. Hometown: Geneva, IL. Who would play you in a movie: For some reason, I’ve always thought Linda Hamilton would do a good job portraying me. She’s tough, athletic, but is still very feminine. Organization: Guardian Critical Care Services. One thing your fridge is never without: Parmesan Cheese Job title: Critical Care Paramedic/ EMS Coordinator. Job scope: Expanded scope: Critical Care Transport. Hardest job aspect: Watching a patient deteriorate, despite my best efforts. Not being able to help a student understand a concept. Most rewarding job: The exact opposite of above: Watching a patient’s condition improve, and seeing the light go on in the head of a student when they understand a difficult concept. 10 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org IT’S ALL WHAT YOU STUDY. It’s All What You Study By David Moltz A t community colleges, an underperforming high school graduate studying computer science is much more likely to see an earnings increase than is a well-prepared high school graduate studying literature. That is the conclusion of a new analysis designed to explore the factors that predict which community college students will gain the most from their education. Tuesday, the Economic Mobility Project of the Pew Charitable Trusts released the results of a study examining the educational attainment and post-college earnings of more than 84,000 Florida students who graduated from high school in 2000 and attended a public institution in the state. Looking at the outcomes of these students, the report then attempts “to identify the most promising educational pathways to increase community college students’ economic mobility” and “the personal and institutional impediments that prevent too many community college students from getting the most from educational opportunities.” Nearly 40 percent of all students who eventually earn bachelor’s and graduate degrees in Florida start their postsecondary education at a community college. The study finds that a majority of those community college students had lower high school grades and were more likely to be from from low-income families as compared to those who attended four-year institutions. Still, among low-income students, those with better high school grades are more likely to attend community colleges than fouryear institutions. Though a community college education boosts postcollege earnings for all students, the study notes that those concentrating in certain fields of study can garner greater earnings. Seven years after exiting college, community college students who studied so-called “high- 12 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org demand” fields like business, computer science and engineering earned about $12,000 more a year than those who studied the humanities or fine arts, concentrations the report calls “low-return.” Chief among the study’s findings, high school graduates with lower grades who attended community colleges can earn more than their classmates who had higher high school grades simply by pursuing “high-return” fields of study like those previously described. In general, the study notes A and B+ high school graduates earn an average of $9,600 more per year than graduates with lower grades. But it further discovers that “lower-performing high school students who concentrate in high-return fields in community college earn $48,000 annually, slightly more than the $44,000 earned by A/B+ high school students who concentrate in low-return fields” there. Still, only a quarter of high school graduates with a C average earned credentials in “high-return” fields, while nearly 40 percent of A and B+ average high school graduates did so. The study’s authors, a fellow at the Hudson Institute and two researchers from CNA, present a series of policy recommendations based on their findings. They primarily argue that states and the federal government should provide more funding to increase capacity in “high-cost, highreturn” fields, while changing funding streams “to remove perverse incentives to enroll students in low-return courses or other courses they are unlikely to complete.” Though the authors suggest “information impediments” are the main reason why many community college students do not complete programs in “medium-return” fields, they note that “lack of capacity” is the likely reason why more do not complete programs “high-return” fields like health care. “The value of increasing the supply of well-training IT’S ALL WHAT YOU STUDY. health-care and other professionals almost certainly would justify shifting resources from low-return courses to courses in health care and other fields where costs are soaring, in part, because employers cannot find enough well-qualified workers,” the authors argue, expounding upon one example. “Thus, the key underlying problem is that community colleges’ funding mechanisms do not equate students’ and society’s benefits of completing courses with the schools’ costs. Rather, there are incentives to enroll students in low-cost, low-return courses and little attention is given to ensuring that students complete courses that will have greater benefit.” To correct what the authors see as an imbalance in state funding, they argue that states could adjust payments for colleges to support “high-cost” programs based on how well they perform, relative to their peers, in preparing students to enter these “high-demand” fields. Current reform movements at community colleges, they argue, are misguided. “The benefits of improving course selection to build skills of value in the workplace and keep students in school long enough to build career-enhancing skills is much less widely recognized and embraced than improving academic performance,” the authors write. “As a result, community colleges generally have given little attention to improving student outcomes by such actions as making high-quality, career-oriented counseling and assessment programs more widely available.” Some academics, however -- especially those who teach the humanities at community colleges -- worry about the conclusions drawn by the Pew report. “What is troubling about the report is the assumption that everyone who goes to college -- two-year or four year -- is there only to increase potential earnings, and the student’s best bet is to find a major that will have the highest payoff,” wrote Sandie McGill Barnhouse, chair of the Two-Year College English Association and English professor at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, in an e-mail. “Should fields of study with ‘medium and low levels of return,’ such as English, protective services, and communications be discouraged because a student could make more money as a nurse? In the 21st century, a graduate with multiple literacies, written, oral, and digital, has the best opportunities for long-term professional achievement across professional lines.” Barnhouse also argued that it might be detrimental to community colleges to divert students from their career ambitions. “Furthermore, not everyone is drawn toward a profession in the ‘high or very high’ level of return careers,” she wrote. “Teachers, law enforcement officers, day care providers, and public service workers are vital contributors to society, and if community colleges counsel students to concentrate on fields with higher economic mobility potential, then community colleges stray from their mission of offering students a chance to be able to pursue their personal goals.” Level of Return Field of Study Sample Professions Avergae Earnings Very High Health care Nurses, medical technicians $60,557 High Agriculture, business, computer science, education, engineering, environmental science, marketing, math Computer programmers, engineers $53,998 Medium Building trades, English, legal services, machinery repair, protective services, technical support for business and industry Paralegals, security guards $49,036 Low Communications, consumer services, fine arts, humanities, human services, performing arts, personal services, public services, social studies Artists, customer service representatives $41,766 Article “It’s All What You Study” re-printed with permission from Inside-HigherEd.com. www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 13 HERO AWARDS 2010 Hero Award Nominations STATE SPOTLIGHT NAEMSE is proud to spotlight the Peach State, Georgia as the first state to be selected for the new ‘State Spotlight’ feature in Educator Update. Every issue NAEMSE will profile a different state’s EMS programs and what accomplishments, goals and challenges each state faces. By: Lauren Rudenko, Communications Coordinator, NAEMSE & Mickey Moore, Program Evaluator, Department of Community Health, Division of Emergency Preparedness and Response Office of EMS and Trauma, State of Georgia NAEMSE is proud to announce that nominations are now being accepted for the 2010 Heroes Award. The NAEMSE Heroes Awards are comprised of three separate honors: Unsung Hero Award—this award is to recognize those unsung men and women who serve our profession each and every day with a commitment to excellence and reflect the very best characteristics of our profession in and out of the classroom. Fallen Hero Award-- in addition to honoring those heroes that are able to be with us today, it is equally important to honor those EMS Educators who have passed that exemplified the best attributes of the teaching profession. STATE SPOTLIGHT GEORGIA Legends That Walk Among Us—this award was created to honor those men and women who have moved our profession forward with their energy and talents at a state or national level. The recipients of the awards will be honored in a ceremony during the 2010 NAEMSE Symposium in Schaumburg, IL. For more information, and to find nomination forms, please visit www.naemse.org, or contact Laura Krawchyk in the NAEMSE office at [email protected]. 1. Briefly describe the EMS education programs in the State of Georgia? There are various programs within Georgia that offer EMS programs such as: Fire based programs, hospital based programs, technical colleges and private programs hosted within a hospital, church or community center. 2. What is the biggest challenge facing EMS education in Georgia? The HOPE grants and scholarships enable students to enroll in an EMS program at no cost. It is sometimes difficult to filter the students who are very serious and motivated to become a skilled and efficient EMS professional and the ones who may not be as motivated and are there just to coast through the program. We are still struggling with National Registry pass rates. Some programs are consistently strong, while others are at or below the national averages. 3. What are some noteworthy accomplishments of EMS Education in Georgia? Georgia is a pioneer in providing online education opportunities for students. Several online EMT Basic and Intermediate courses are offered within the State. Classes can be taken online and participants can work around their busy schedules. However, practicals and clinicals must be completed “on-site.” Georgia also offers a FREE online continuing education program to medics and instructors who need continuing ed credits. They can complete them either at home or on the job. 4. What are the long term goals – Georgia would like to be executed in EMS education? Accreditation of all Paramedic programs, so far only one program has been accredited in Georgia. Also implementing more online collaborations and training opportunities. Put Your State in the Spotlight NAEMSE wants to showcase EMS programs in your State. We’d like to begin building a collection of profiles to feature in future issues of Educator Update and on our web site. You can help by answering these questions to build your state’s profile 1. Briefly describe the educational program (s) within your state. 2. What is the biggest challenge(s) facing EMS Education in your state? 3. What are some noteworthy accomplishments of your EMS Education programs? 4. In your mind, what are some long and short term goals you’d like to see be executed in EMS Education in your state? You can email your answers to [email protected] 14 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 15 CORPORATE PARTNER NEWS CORPORATE PARTNER NEWS several of the nation’s foremost institutions of higher learning, including The George Washington University (CAAHEP-accredited EMS management program) and Lake Superior State University (IFSAC-accredited fire science program) to provide you with convenient programs to enhance your career. Complete an associate’s degree in fire science in as little as 12 to 24 months, or complete a bachelor’s degree in EMS management or fire science in as little as 24 to 30 months. Remember, as a NAEMSE member you can save money on your degree program. Call 1-888-672-2969, or visit our web site at www. college-net.com/naemse to learn more. Gold Corporate Sponsor: Pocket Nurse American Heart Association LeadsinHealthcareTraining Learn from the Leader in Quality Healthcare Training – whatever your learning style. As EMS educators, you already know the American Heart Association as the originator of the official Guidelines for CPR and ECC. You know that our quality training programs begin with unassailable science that is carried through to the design of our courses and training materials. And you know that our ACLS, PALS, and BLS programs are the global gold standard in science, training, and education. But there are still a few things about us you might not know. We’re leading the way in eLearning, giving busy healthc a r e professionals more options for learning. Through OnlineAHA.org, our eLearning platform, healthcare providers have access to both 100% online, as well as blended learning courses. Look for our new HeartCode™ BLS, 16 | HeartCode™ ACLS and Learn:™ Rapid STEMI ID courses on OnlineAHA.org. We offer many opportunities for continuing education! We build training programs to address key knowledge gaps – based on YOUR feedback. Courses including Airway Management , ECG & Pharmacology and LEARN: ™ Rapid STEMI ID help healthcare providers enhance skills and prepare for ACLS training, while PEARS educates healthcare providers who may not often see children, in recognition and assessment of a pediatric cardiac event. ARE YOU A PARAMEDIC PROGRAM DIRECTOR OR WANT TO BECOME ONE? Did you know that the Committee on Accreditation of Educational Programs for the EMS Professions will require by 2012 that Paramedic Program Directors have bachelor’s degrees in order to run an accredited program? Great news! You can earn your degree conveniently online without interrupting your professional career.The College Network™ partners with Educator Update | www.naemse.org World Point Education and Training Products WorldPoint is an active and engaged partner and supplier to the American Heart Association and the ECC Training Network. 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This series presents paramedic care with an interrupted case studies approach, a very effective and proven way to learn and retain concepts and skills. The first volume has received rave reviews so far. Delmar Cengage Learning is proud to serve EMS educators like you every day. Have you received our new monthly EMS Educator eNewsletter? It’s filled with articles, tips and tricks written by veteran EMS educators, just for you: visit www.cengage.com/ems to sign up today. Delmar Cengage Learning is proud to sponsor the NAEMSE Heroes Awards each year. www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 17 CORPORATE PARTNER NEWS Pioneers of defibrillation technology More than 50 years ago Physio-Control pioneered defibrillation technology to offer hope for hundreds of thousands of people who experience sudden cardiac arrest each year. 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As a member, they wear a bracelet, necklace, or watch engraved with the most critical medical information you need. Members also know you can call our 24-hour emergency response number, engraved on the ID, to get additional essential details 18 of their medical history and other personal emergency information. MedicAlert can also contact their family, informing them of the emergency. The mission of MedicAlert is to help you protect and save lives. We’ve developed a FREE Continuing Education program explaining how the MedicAlert services can help you in emergency events. com offers exclusive feature reports authored by leading journalists in the field, as well as advanced clinical articles penned by the nation’s top emergency physicians. Contact [email protected] or call 1-800-228-6222 ext. 2427, and we’ll send a kit to you. It is the largest online EMS website offering the most up-to-date news, forums, articles, podcasts, jobs and video. 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EMSResponder. | Educator Update | www.naemse.org Official Publication of the National Association of EMS Educators Winter 2010 DOMAIN 3 Providing a Voice for EMS Educators In This Issue 20 and the EMS Educator Ultimate reference tool for EMS Education PEPID EMS Plus NAEMSE is the only electronic quick-reference for emergency medical personnel that is designed for use at the scene and en route. It is also the ultimate reference tool for EMS education and training. PEPID EMS helps students in the classroom and as they transition into the fast-paced environment of emergency medical services. When you offer your students a complete medical reference — plus EMS-specific topics from NAEMSE — they not only carry the basics of pre-hospital care with them wherever they go. They also gain quick and easy access to acute signs and symptoms management, emergency protocols, a complete drug database, scores and algorithms, toxicology, quick EKG reference and quick IV calculations. PEPID EMS gives emergency medical professionals a simple way to drill down to critical information from anywhere, at anytime. Standardized Assessment 23 Educational Test & Design: An Introduction and Overview 27 Discipline Expertise - Part II From the Editor’s Desk . . . By: Bill Raynovich, NREMT-P, EdD NAEMSE Publications Committee Chair Lauren Rudenko, B.A. NAEMSE Publications and Communications Admin. The Board of Directors of NAEMSE have formally approved the formation of an Editorial Review Board. The formal recognition of our Editorial Reviewers will assure recruitment of qualified editorial reviewers, appropriate recognition, and transparency of the editorial selection of articles for publication in Domain3! With the formal blinded peer reviews, Domain3 is now being indexed in EBSCO. If you are interested in serving on the Editorial Review Board, please contact [email protected]. We are always seeking articles of interest and are interested in helping new authors develop their skills and learn how to prepare manuscripts for publication. If you have a topic of interest in mind, or have written a paper for school that might be suitable for publication, please send your ideas or drafts to [email protected] for review by our Publications Committee. We’re always pleased to have the chance to work with nascent authors to help them get published. Our focus for future issues of Domain3 include: Submission Deadline: Teaching and Evaluating in the Affective Domain................................... January 22, 2010 Distributed Education, Online Learning.................................................. April 22, 2010 Program Evaluation and Assessment....................................................... July 30, 2010 The Master Instructor............................................................................... October 12, 2010 www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 19 DOMAIN3 Standardized Assessment and the EMS Educator By: Christi Montellato, EMT-P, Course Director W hat if the world of student assessment were reversed? What would happen if the skills proctor suddenly became the skills student? Would we pass our own exam? Would we feel the testing was objective, consistent and relevant? Would we be confident that we had been adequately prepared to meet the guidelines? Testing during EMS education is perhaps one of the most unique experiences that any student will ever encounter. However, we can be hopeful that the days when Paramedic Instructors would scream distractions in their students’ ears and deliberately try to cause students to err are long gone. As studies begin to document the benefit of various testing methods, we too have evolved to implement a more standardized approach. In 2200 BC the Chinese government began to note the numerous benefits of test standardization in their military personnel. Over the centuries, this process of utilizing a common guideline to maintain consistency in student examination has become quite prominent. In the 1900’s this standardization began to appear in the United States for scholastic exams, government training and psychological evaluation. Since then, its benefits have been proven time and again. Even EMS has been part of this popularization by utilizing tests such as skills exams and National Registry to ensure that there is no deviation from guidelines. However, the question remains, do we actually understand the significance and benefits of this technique in the EMS classroom? A brief investigation of our own student assessments would possibly find us farther than ever from test standardization. The benefits of using test standardization are both diverse and plentiful. Many collegiate level educators prefer this first and foremost because of ease of use. They document perks such as ability to grade tests via automated systems, quickly administer the same directions to large groups of students and multiple other time saving advantages. Perhaps the second reason we find these tests to be so valuable is that they will, unavoidably, cause us to evaluate whether or not our classroom techniques are beneficial to students. An audit of results from a standardized test will quickly tell an educa- 20 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org tor of issues with materials or of information that is not being communicated. Additional positives include allowing the educator to remain objective, causing students to push themselves to reach high standards of achievement and, finally, the ability to make scenarios realistic and consistent. Why is it, then, that with so many obvious benefits many EMS educators seem to struggle with the concept of test standardization? After watching numerous educators bungle their way through different student assessments, I must conclude that, as someone once said “Old habits simply die-hard”. Perhaps we’re just not evolving with the rest of the education community to embrace the advantages of a standardized approach. It takes much practice, discipline and experience to offer EMS students the most objective student examination. EMS educators should be aware of the following tips to achieve effective test standardization. First and foremost, a test cannot be standardized unless the guidelines for successful completion are clearly defined in writing. It is only practical to have a written goal sheet or checklist during skills exams and a minimum qualifying score for written tests. This standard should be made known to students well in advance and should be strictly adhered to. Should the student not meet the requirements for successful completion they must be remediated. Not only is it crucial that the guidelines are clearly defined but also that the instructor is firm enough to maintain the highest of standards. Students will better respect an instructor who is strong enough to hold them accountable for their own actions. In a practical sense, taking notes during a skills or verbal exam is an extremely useful tool for determining whether or not a student meets the requirements. Checklists are widely accepted and used in EMS education but they cannot be our only tool. Be sure to document any error that is made rather than relying on your memory. In this manner, you, as the facilitator, can remain completely objective. Additionally, instructors should strive to avoid scare tactics and student demoralization. Recent Gallup Polls show that DOMAIN3 Every EMS educator should be aware of the following tip to achieve effective test standardization. First and foremost, a test cannot be standardized unless the guidelines for successful completion are clearly defined in writing. the most common fears in the United States are public speaking and failure. An astonishing 38% of Americans are afraid of speaking in front of groups while an equally surprising majority are terrified of failure, be it financial, scholastic or achievement related. It only makes sense then that psychomotor skills testing, which involves both public speaking and the risk of failure, can be an extremely traumatic experience for students. Educators should be aware of the anxiety that is often associated with student assessment and carefully avoid causing further stress. While techniques like intimidation and deliberate mis-direction may have been successful in military or law enforcement training, they are not currently viewed as effective classroom techniques. Instead, approaching students as a supportive evaluator will allow them to learn from their mistakes and make the most of their testing experience. One of the other major concerns facing students is that they will be tested on material that they have not studied. Being that emergency medicine is such a dynamic field, we must remember that with our examinations we are also preparing them for real life testing of their skills and knowledge base. As educators, it is our responsibility to teach students the material that they will be faced with on their final didactic exam and the information they will need when they begin their career. If you must add something to an exam that you have not covered in class or that was not addressed in the curricula, consider offering it as a determinant for added credit. One of the toughest areas for any person in the field of EMS education is separating the mentor from the proctor. Once an examination is begun, it is crucial that the educator allow the students to work through it on their own. Allowing room for extra discussion during a skills test or coaching a student through a written exam not only causes room for personal bias but can also eliminate the validity of the exam. Expect your students to perform skills scenarios as realistically as possible and do not allow yourself to be tempted to prompt a student during a written exam. Remember, once testing begins, you are no longer the educator but the facilitator. Finally, if a student does not meet the criteria to pass the exam they must be privately remediated. It is never appropriate to ask the rest of the class whether or not the student should pass their skills exam and it is even more important that a student is given negative feedback in private. Numerous studies have documented that students are more apt to receive criticism and learn from their mistakes if they are not publicly humiliated. Keep in mind that our ultimate goal is to ensure that the student knows the material and can successfully complete the exam. Give them an opportunity to review their mistakes, ask questions as needed and attempt the exam again if allowed. Do the freedoms we take in the classroom ultimately interfere with test standardization or enhance it? It can only be concluded that proper student evaluation entails a fine balance of ethical and legal responsibility. On one side of the scale we have the importance of maintaining high standards in the testing process. From ensuring that guidelines are solidly established to properly remediating students, we must recognize the severity of problems that can arise from allowing shoddy test practices. On the opposite side of the scale we find the need to allow students the room to succeed. In order to complete this balance we must not overcompensate by berating students or attempting to demean their correct responses. On the same note, we must also ensure that they are adequately prepared for exams and given objective treatment. It is only when this, ever so delicate, scale is parallel that testing standardization is attained. References: Haladyna, T. M. (2002). Essentials of Standardized Achievement Testing. Validity and Accountability. Boston: Allyn and Baco Jorgenson, O. & Vanosdall, R. (Aprill 2002). The Death of Science? What we risk in our rush toward standardized testing and the three R’s. Phi Delta Kappan, 601-605. Ward, A.W. & Murray-Ward, M. (1999). Assesssment in the Classroom. Albany, NY: Wadsworth Publishing Company. Matthews, J. (November, 2006) Just Whose Idea Was All This Testing? Washington Post Gallup Polls, 2001 Survey of American Phobias ( >1000 Respondents) Niles, K. (CR 2000-2009) Importance of Test Plans or Test Protocols (With Template) Six Sigma. San Diego : http:// www.isixsigma.com/library/content/c040920a.asp Further References Available Upon Request. www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 21 DOMAIN3 SAVE THE DATE Educational Test Design: An Introduction & Brief Overview By: Darrell DeMartino NAEMSE is headed to the Windy City 15TH ANNUAL EDUCATIONAL SYMPOSIUM & TRADE SHOW SEPTEMBER 7-12TH, 2010 RENAISSANCE SCHAUMBURG HOTEL & CONVENTION CENTER SCHAUMBURG, IL (suburb of Chicago) ON THE WINDS OF CHANGE IN EMS EDUCATION “EMS instructor classes focus more time and content on methods of instruction rather than test development and analysis (NHTSA, 2002).” Introduction When the word “test” comes to mind, many different ideas come to mind. Students might think of a quiz or exam, a certification exam or the National Registry test. In K-12 education, testing is a regular part of state-required achievement testing. In higher education, testing may take the form of standardized tests that rank candidates for admission (i.e., ACT, SAT, GRE). As an EMS educator, the word “test” tends to have alternative meanings as well. Testing can be viewed from many different perspectives and may have many different purposes. In EMS, educators focus on three domains of testing; the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor. The National Guidelines for Educating EMS Instructors refers to these as domains of evaluation (NHTSA, 2002). The scope of these tests can be formative or summative. Within the cognitive domain, instructors need to evaluate students’ knowledge of the course content. If the purpose of a test is to measure progress and provide feedback about performance, then the exam is used as a formative evaluation tool. In this case we are looking at performance “along the way”, and the test is used to determine who might need remediation or if a topic needs to be re-taught. This is often seen as course quizzes given within a unit. Summative testing, on the other hand, is used to evaluate knowledge (skills or attitude) at some end-point; this can be at the end of a unit/module or at the end of the course. Summative tests are used to determine whether success at that point has been reached or not. In EMS, the course final exam is an example of a summative exam. In moving to the other domains (affective and psychomotor), both formative and summative evaluations still occur, however the formative assessment is often overlooked. In the psychomotor domain, the skills test is often an endpoint test evaluating students’ ability to perform a skill. In affective domain, the formative and summative tests should be used. Formative testing needs to be considered since we are looking at ongoing attitude and beliefs, with summative evaluation as a means to ensure students have obtained the levels of competency we expect (e.g. professionalism). The EMS instructor should have a firm understanding of all three domains and the different scopes of testing. This is determined by clearly articulating the purpose of the test. Process of Test Development: Know Your Purpose Educators spend more time on teaching than evalua- www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 23 DOMAIN3 tion. As well, EMS instructor classes focus more time and content on methods of instruction rather than test development and analysis (NHTSA, 2002). This has resulted in a high utilization of test banks. However, utilizing a publisher’s test or test questions to prepare a test can result in compromised test integrity if used incorrectly. Thus the critical starting point for test development is to understand the purpose of your test. To administer a valid test for a course, the instructor must target the test and each test question specifically to the course, and that is accomplished through a test “blueprint” (Sax, 1997). The “blueprint” is the design plan for the test. It balances the content of the test to be proportional to the course content. It links each test item to the lesson plans, the goals and objectives, and the references for the content. A standardized publisher’s test can never be perfectly matched to a course, the students, and is not confidential. Thus, individual test development is preferred over randomly selecting items from a test bank. Following item and test development, the questions are pilot tested. This is why students see extra test questions on certification and licensure tests. Once the questions are deemed appropriate, including free of error and bias, they can be administered as part of the actual test. There are a variety of administration methods from paper and pencil, to computerized that will not be addressed here, but recognize different testing environments and methods can result in different outcomes. For most EMS classroom tests, this will be in paper and pencil format. After the test is administered, is important to determine how well the test performed. That is, did the test validly and reliably differentiate the passing from the failing students? How did each test question perform? These are critical analytic questions that must be considered after every test. One example is the use of item discrimination indices to determine how well the items on a test did at achieving its goal (Sax, 1997). Finally, the test results must be calculated and feedback given to the students. They may be reported as pass/fail (e.g., NREMT tests), a scaled score (e.g. SAT, ACT), or as a raw score (e.g., percentage or number answered correctly). The choice of this reporting is dependent upon the purpose of the test. If the test is used to determine if someone met the standards for certification, such as the NREMT, the results should be reported as success/ non-success. If the purpose is to compare students as in admission testing, then a scaled score may be more appropriate. In many cases, the raw score is used as a means of calculating a student’s course grade. DOMAIN3 sults are the foundation of test development. The National Registry, for example, makes their testing purpose clear in their mission statement, “… to provide a valid, uniform process to assess the knowledge and skills required for competent practice …” (NREMT, 2009). EMS Instructors need to keep in mind the purpose of their tests, rather than testing for the sake of testing. Blueprinting In developing a test blueprint, it is recommended that the instructor develop a table of specifications that outline the number of items, objectives, content, and level of complexity of items. Instead of selecting items from an item bank (e.g. test-generator software with textbooks), a process is established that identifies the type, number, and level of knowledge according to Bloom’s taxonomy level for each content area to be tested. This means that all the areas to be tested are identified up front and clearly articulated. It is generally not possible to test all of the knowledge of a unit reliably due to time constraints. Many instructors inform students about the blueprint information. For instance, it is valid to let students know that the test has 63 cardiac questions, 24 of which are EKG, and of those, 10 are 12-Lead questions etc. This helps students understand what they will be expected to know and how to focus their time in preparing for the test. Sharing this information also provides an argument for supporting the validity of the examination. Item Development Once a test blueprint is developed, the items (test questions) can be developed. The items should conform to the table of specifications in the blueprint. In all high-stakes tests, the item development process is the most time consuming and costly. It commonly costs professional testing organizations more than $1000 per multiple-choice item developed. Furthermore, the professional testing organizations continually develop new test items and maintain banks of many more items than they administer in any test. They also “pilot” the test items to validate them many times prior to including the items in the final scoring. No individual course or EMS training program would be able to devote the resources required to match that level of testing design validation. The cost and work involved in creating good items, and the need to protect the integrity of the test, results in a need for security. Security involves a locked physical space, password protected computer files, and the professional integrity of all program instructors and staff. When test security is compromised, the costs can be high, in dollars and in professional reputations, as well maintaining good standing as a student or as an employee. A follow up article in the next addition of Domain3 will address the principles of good item development. Administration Once a test has been developed, then the test must be given to students. It can be delivered on paper or electronically on the computer. It can be administered simultaneously to all students at once or individual as typical of a skills test. In some cases, examinations are given verbally. Decisions must also be made as to how many different versions of a test will be produced, and how they will be distributed (e.g. alternating forms). If the test is timed, what are the parameters of the timing, and how is time determined. Collectively, the testing parameters will be used to assess the validity of the test, thus test length, time, medium, and preparations time (i.e. pop quiz) must be considered. Additionally, if a student is absent on the day of a test, decisions must be made as to under what conditions a make-up test will be given and whether it is an alternative version of the test. In some cases, instructors do not give opportunities for make-ups (e.g. missed quiz). Item/Test Analysis After the test is administered, both the items and the test itself need to be evaluated. This will help uncover miskeyed items, poor functioning test questions, and areas where content was inadequately taught or learned. The issue of test validity and reliability are considered as a part of this analysis. Without these steps, the meanings of the test results have limited utility. Awarding students with high test grades on a test the functioned poorly has no value beyond saying you gave them a test. As education program look towards national accreditation, the steps in evaluating your program including the tests used to determine an EMS student is competent should not be underestimated. Follow up articles in the next addition of Domain3 will address the principles of item analysis, item discrimination, and the topics of validity and reliability. Educator Update | www.naemse.org Overall, when reporting make sure the reports match the purpose of the test. If the test is formative, then the score should be addressing progress. If the test is summative and designed to understand content mastery, then scoring systems that reflect overall performance is important. If the goal is to compare students, then the test should be designed with this in mind. This might be appropriate in selecting students to admit to a paramedic program or selecting scholarship candidates. Conclusion EMS instructors need to have expertise in testing, including planning, designing and evaluating the performance of the tests that they administer. Test design and evaluation are highly specialized academic areas of psychology and psychometrics. This article is a first step to provide a tool towards developing the ability to design, assess and improve tests. This article highlights the value of testing with a purpose or goal in mind and provides a rationale for each program to develop a valid test based on a blueprint and sound testing principles. Test development has many stages and requires understanding of why the test is being designed. References Reporting Once the test has been administered and the performance score calculated, feedback can be given to the examinees. If the goal of the test was to determine students who might need remediation or to identify those who obtain “entry-level competency,” then letter grades, percentages, or numerical scores may not be important. If scores on tests are used to calculate an academic course letter grade, then precise scores might be used. Students may want to compare their score to another Knowing the purpose of the test and how to use the re- 24 | student’s score, but the comparison is often inappropriate. First, students might have taken different versions of the test. Second, most testing done in EMS is not designed to rank students and assign grades based on their performance in comparison with the class, or group (normative testing). Most EMS testing is achievement or competency testing, in which students are measured as a portion of content master (criterion-referenced). Third, advanced testing systems assign different values to items, thus making raw scores meaningless as different the same number of questions answered correctly can produces different scores. NHTSA. (2002). National Guidelines for Educating EMS Instructors. Retrieved from http://www.nhtsa. gov/people/injury/ems/Instructor/TableofContents.htm. NREMT. (2009). NREMT Mission Statement. Retrieved from http://www.nremt.org/ nremt/about/ mission_statement.asp. Sax, G. (1997). Instructor’s manual for principles of educational and psychological measurement and evaluation. Belmont, CA ; Toronto: Wadsworth. www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 25 DOMAIN3 EXCEPTIONAL LEARNING FOR EMS EDUCATORS THE NAEMSE INSTRUCTOR COURSE Modules developed from the DOT/NHTSA 2002 National Guidelines Provides a basic introduction of educational concepts Provides tools and resources for the EMS Instructor An interactive course that encourages professional growth PROGRAM INFORMATION, COURSE UPDATES, AND REGISTRATION www.naemse.org (412) 920-4775 Discipline Expertise and the Effect on Classroom Instruction By Terry DeVito, Ed.D., RN, EMT-P, EMSI I n part one, the discussion evolved around the manner in which discipline experts think and how they process information. Part two reflects on ways this expertise in a specific discipline may actually affect teaching style. Recently, I sat in the classroom listening to the Emergency Department’s toxicologist lecture to our paramedic students. What struck me most was his amazing content knowledge base, but equally impressive was his wonderful teaching style that made the material easily understood and enjoyable. As this was content that does not come easily to me, I found myself listening more intently not just to what he was saying but also how he was saying it. As he made sense of cholinergic and anticholinergic toxidromes, hydrocarbons and acid versus alkaline chemical reactions and burns; I realized I was seeing discipline expertise and teaching at its finest. The fact that he was brilliant in the content knowledge goes without saying. However, I watched him consciously process his thoughts as he was speaking. He spoke in a manner that included details when necessary but at other times spoke globally. It was a balance that worked well as he translated his vast knowledge into understandable content. This experience related so well to information that speaks to discipline experts and how their expertise affects classroom teaching styles. I could not wait to add it to this discussion! So with this experience in mind, I looked to the research regarding discipline experts who teach in the classroom and how they translate their vast knowledge into classroom instruction. As EMS education has evolved over the last twenty years, no longer do we rely on other discipline experts such as emergency physicians or nurses to teach exclusively in the classroom. EMS providers are now their own “experts” and do most of the instruction while the physicians and nurses are the “guest lecturers”. With this in mind, I found it interesting to read how the National Research Council (2000) found that teachers with an expertise in a certain discipline organize content around “core concepts or big ideas that guide thinking” (p.37). This content knowledge is stored in contextual frameworks, not just as a list of facts or individual ideas. The experts see the global picture and understand the discipline content as it affects or interacts with other information. Knowing this, we need to realize that this global picture has developed over time with repetitive exposure and experience. A novice student does not have the underlying experience to fully understand the details that go into this bigger picture. Just as the expert toxicologist did, EMS educators need to consciously explain the how, the why and the reasons involved with the content while discussing the larger theoretical concept. Another specialty group the NRC (2000) studied was history teachers. It was noted that they present information in a contextual format. For example, when they discussed the Renaissance, they presented information in their classrooms in a manner that correlated dates and the names of people who lived during the time in such a way that it painted a picture of the era itself, not just as a list of dates and names to memorize. This larger contextual framework provided a better understanding of this time in history. This can be likened to watching a movie about the Renaissance. The organization of the knowledge is the whole movie. If one were to separate the frames, such as dates and names, the knowledge becomes fragmented and not easily remembered or learned. As we apply this concept to our EMS classrooms, we need to realize that as EMS experts, we also will teach in relation to the bigger picture. Therefore, it makes sense to approach our instruction by teaching material not in isolation, but using a contextual framework. This allows a student to see how the information fits in a larger context; www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 27 DOMAIN3 thus it becomes more meaningful and can be applied to other similar situations. However, we still need to provide the foundational information to assist with the learning. This can be accomplished by assisting the EMS student to conceptualize new information in light of the context of the illness pathology, patient signs and symptoms, and management as well as factual memorization such as anatomy and physiology. This combination will provide a foundation for effective teaching and learning. Expert teachers are also noted to have their own set of teaching patterns which are specific to the content they teach and assist students with learning, problem solving, and retention. The NRC (2000) stated: “different disciplines are organized differently and have different approaches to inquiry” (p. 155). The Council believes that discipline experts think and speak in an exclusive domain-specific manner and a deep understanding of the discipline content supports this way of thinking and talking. The experts are able to choose teaching techniques that best interact with the theory. “Different disciplines are organized differently and have different approaches to inquiry….effective teachers need pedagogical content knowledge (knowledge about how to teach in particular disciplines) rather than only knowledge of a particular subject matter” (p. 155). This point emphasizes the need for EMS instructors to have a mastery of content knowledge as well as a solid knowledge of pedagogical theory. The combination of both knowledge bases will assist with the organization of the content into meaningful segments enhanced by effective teaching strategies. One last point to make is that the NRC (2000) found that discipline experts think in a manner that creates “meaningful patterns of information” (p.32). This ability to recognize patterns develops over time, with experience, and results from the deep understanding of their discipline-specific content. “Experts begin to ‘chunk’ various elements of a configuration that are related by an underlying function or strategy” (p.32). This categorization or chunking allows the retrieval of information that assists with rapid problem solving and the development of critical thinking skills. “Expertise in a domain helps people develop a sensitivity to patterns of meaningful information that are not available to novices” (p. 33). This pattern recognition affects the manner in which discipline experts organize content in the THE EVIDENCE ON ONLINE EDUCATION classroom. In the EMS classroom we need to realize that our students may not recognize the patterns we see. Thus it is important to speak to the student as opposed to speaking at the student. I go back to the toxicologist, as he spoke he walked around the room and made eye contact with the students. He was reading their expressions and their body language while he spoke and asked questions. One could see his ability to think through how he was presenting the information in light of how the students were receiving it. I would like to leave you the reader with one last quote that summarizes the concept of what comprises successful teaching and learning: A great course is more likely the result of a long and continuous effort of thinking, researching and reflecting upon the issues of what is the purpose of the course, who are the learners, what constitutes learning, what methods of instruction are suitable and how do you implement them in a given context (O’Grady, 2001. p. 4). As the prehospital environment continues to become more complex and challenging in terms of patient criticality and patient care, the importance of what transpires in the EMS classroom in light of teaching methodology and mastery of content knowledge is looming large. Let us all aspire to not only be like the expert toxicologist or the history teacher, but also to begin developing our own legacy within the EMS educational process. I found it interesting to read how the National Research Council (2000) found that teachers with an expertise in a certain discipline organize content around “core concepts or big ideas that guide thinking” (p.37). 28 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org References: National Research Council. (2000). How People Learn. (Expanded ed.).Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. O’Grady, Glen (2001) Designing & Planning a Successful Course: Bridging the Gap Between Common Practice and Best Practice. CDTL Brief . Vol4. No.6 EDITOR’S COMMENT: This is Part II of a two-part series. Part I was published in the Summer 2009 issue Evidence On Online Education By Scott Jaschik “The Education Department report said that it had identified more than 1,000 empirical studies of online learning that were published from 1996 through July 2008.” O nline learning has definite advantages over face-toface instruction when it comes to teaching and learning, according to a new meta-analysis released Friday by the U.S. Department of Education. The study found that students who took all or part of their instruction online performed better, on average, than those taking the same course through face-to-face instruction. Further, those who took “blended” courses -- those that combine elements of online learning and face-to-face instruction -- appeared to do best of all. That finding could be significant as many colleges report that blended instruction is among the fastest-growing types of enrollment. The Education Department examined all kinds of instruction, and found that the number of valid analyses of elementary and secondary education was too small to have much confidence in the results. But the positive results appeared consistent (and statistically significant) for all types of higher education, undergraduate and graduate, across a range of disciplines, the study said. A meta-analysis is one that takes all of the existing studies and looks at them for patterns and conclusions that can be drawn from the accumulation of evidence. On the topic of online learning, there is a steady stream of studies, but many of them focus on limited issues or lack of control groups. The Education Department report said that it had identified more than 1,000 empirical studies of online learning that were published from 1996 through July 2008. For its conclusions, however, the Education Department considered only a small number (51) of independent studies that met strict criteria. They had to contrast an online teaching experience to a face-to-face situation, measure student learning outcomes, use a “rigorous research design,” and provide adequate information to calculate the differences. The department noted that this new meta-analysis differs from previous such studies, which generally found that online education and face-to-face instruction were similarly effective on issues of learning, but didn’t give an edge to online learning that may now exist. While the new study provides a strong endorsement of online learning, it also notes findings about the relative success (or lack thereof) of various teaching techniques used in online courses. The use of video or online quizzes -- frequently encouraged for online education -“does not appear to enhance learning,” the report says. Using technology to give students “control of their interactions” has a positive effect on student learning, however. “Studies indicate that manipulations that trigger learner activity or learner reflection and self-monitoring of understanding are effective when students pursue online learning as individuals,” the report says. Notably, the report attributes much of the success in learning online (blended or entirely) not to technology but to time. “Studies in which learners in the online condition spent more time on task than students in the face-to-face condition found a greater benefit for online learning,” the report says. In noting caveats about the findings, the study returns to the issue of time. www.naemse.org | Educator Update | 29 NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS THE EVIDENCE ON ONLINE EDUCATION “Despite what appears to be strong support for online learning applications, the studies in this meta-analysis do not demonstrate that online learning is superior as a medium,” the report says. “In many of the studies showing an advantage for online learning, the online and classroom conditions differed in terms of time spent, curriculum and pedagogy. It was the combination of elements in the treatment conditions (which was likely to have included additional learning time and materials as well as additional opportunities for collaboration) that produced the observed learning advantages. At the same time, one should note that online learning is much more conducive to the expansion of learning time than is faceto-face instruction.” In a statement, Education Secretary Arne Duncan urged educators to consider the report’s findings. “This new report reinforces that effective teachers need to incorporate digital content into everyday classes and consider open-source learning management systems, which have proven cost effective in school districts and colleges nationwide,” he said. John R. Bourne, executive director of the Sloan Consortium, a group of colleges and other organizations that work on online education issues, said he was not surprised by the findings, but thought it was quite important that the Education Department was the source. “I think this is incredibly significant,” he said. “Those of us in the business have thought these things for some time, but we have had enormous trouble convincing some folks” about the quality of online education. “I think this will give more credibility to the things that have been said.” Diana G. Oblinger, president of Educause, also was pleased with the findings. “Online education provides additional opportunities,” she said. “It gives people greater opportunity for flexibility, for experiential learning, for illustrating things in multiple ways such as visualization.” What the study demonstrates, she said, is that colleges need to think broadly about using online education, and not be “artificially limited” to face-to-face instruction. Lawrence N. Gold, director of higher education at the American Federation of Teachers, said via e-mail that it was important to pay attention to the report’s caveats and not view it as evidence for shifting everything possible online. “This report correctly recognizes that online learning and blended learning are growing components of higher education and, employed properly, can play a significant role in promoting student learning. Further public investment in experimentation and technology is certainly warranted,” he said. But noting the caveats in the report about factors other than medium of instruction, he said that “we should not take the report as saying it is simply better to move 30 | Educator Update | www.naemse.org to online learning. These results demonstrate why more research is needed -- broadly based research that moves well beyond case studies conducted by distance education practitioners, research focused on student retention in online environments and especially research that looks behind the instructional medium to isolate the characteristics of instruction that produce positive results. Successful education has always been about engaging students whether it is in an online environment, face to face or in a blended setting. And fundamental to that is having faculty who are fully supported and engaged in that process as well.” EDUCATORS NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS W ell, another year has blown by and it’s the start of a new decade. As we approach the New Year, we thought it would be fun to share a list of some potential new year resolutions. We hope you find them useful and that they encourage you to make some positive changes in 2010. Happy New Year! Educator’s Top 5 New Year Resolutions... Continue Your Education – 1. Keep up-to-date in your areas of study by reading at least one article each week. The Educator Update/Domain3 magazine has many educational articles that are helpful to you in the classroom. 2. Finish your degree by registering with NAEMSE‘s Corporate Partner THE COLLEGE NETWORK. Take advantage of the discount offered to NAEMSE members. 3. Need continuing education? NAEMSE in conjunction with CentreLearn, is offering all NAEMSE members 2 free continuing education credits towards any online training material. 4. Register for NAEMSE’s Symposium 2010, September 7 -12 where you can learn new educational techniques, and network with your peers. Read Up On Current Events – 1. Find a unique and fun way to incorporate current events into your classroom. Visit NAEMSE’s webpage for current EMS events to use as discussion in the classroom. Article “The Evidence On Online Education” re-printed with permission from Inside-HigherEd.com. By: Joann Freel, BS, CMP - Executive Director Green Your Classroom – 1. Reuse paper, recycle cans, bottles and paper, encourage students to use reusable water bottles. Make it a class project to recycle and use the dollars returned for a class outing. Get Involved – 1. Find a way to encourage your students to get involved in a community service project. 2. Join a committee at NAEMSE! There are many opportunities at NAEMSE that will open new avenues of awareness for you as an EMS educator! 3. Renew your membership with the association. Learn a New Skill – Learn how to sew, dance, play a sport, etc and share your learning experience with your students. For example, learn to use Twitter or Facebook (C. LeBaudour’s example) and involve your students. Exercise , Take Care of YOU – 1. Join a gym to exercise at least 20 minutes 3 -4 times a week. 2. Eat healthy – no more fast foods; pack your lunch; incorporate the food pyramid into your classroom discussion. Thank you for your friendship and support of NAEMSE in 2009 and best wishes for a safe and happy 2010. NAEMSE Foster Plaza 6 681 Andersen Drive Pittsburgh, PA 15220 NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION PAID PITTSBURGH, PA PERMIT NO. 5369