Transformational Times

Words of Hope, Character & Resilience from our Virtual Community

Friday, June 2, 2023

In This Issue:


Director's Corner

Adina Kalet, MD, MPH: Kern INstitute’s Educational Transformation in Teaching Competence, Caring, and Character (KINETIC3) Teaching Academy: The fifth cohort graduates! 



Perspective/Opinion

Poetry Corner

In Praise of Virtue, Jack Coulehan, MD

Share a poem with us!

Rhubarb food, your plants origin story, recipes?

Share Here

Answers from last week: What is your favorite movie and why?



  • The Family Stone. I have so many favorite movies! The Family Stone- staring Diane Keaton-- stands out as one of my favorites, particularly around the holidays. It combines wonderful humor and the thread of reality that all families are complicated. It sends a reminder to me to cherish time together. -Wendy Peltier, MD
  • The Crying Game. Solely because the song at the end is amazingly perfect. Jeff Fritz, PhD
  • Finding Nemo. While I have many favorite movies this one stands out as a wonderful mix of funny, deeply warm but also complicated. I have watched it about 150 times, as it was one of my youngest child's favorite movies too. -Adina Kalet, MD, MPH
  • Usual Suspects. I found the psychological aspects of the movie interesting.
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Director's Corner


Kern INstitute’s Educational Transformation in Teaching Competence, Caring, and Character (KINETIC3) Teaching Academy: The fifth cohort graduates! 



By Adina Kalet, MD, MPH


To kick off this Transformational Times issue curated by members of the Kern Institute Faculty Pillar reflecting on the impact of KINETIC3 —our signature faculty development program—Dr. Kalet describes the program, its impact, its legacy, and how we are building the capacity for transformational change, one educator at a time ...  


“Never forget we are educating physicians” whispers the purple and blue quilt I stitched a few years ago while editing a book on remediation in medical education. Putting this motto on fabric was what I needed at the time to quell the doubts and survive those lonesome hours spent honing my own expertise as a medical educator. As I slowly crafted chapter after chapter aimed at capturing my own experience and guiding other educators and learners as they navigated treacherous terrain, the quilt reminded me how what I was doing matters. 

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Perspective/Opinion



Celebrating Educator Excellence: Never. Stop. Learning 



By Kristina Kaljo, PhD



Is the concept of excellence subjective? Is excellence discipline-specific? More importantly, as educators, how do we strive for excellence? Here's a thought – never stop learning (and always find time to celebrate!)

 

In just two short weeks, on June 15th, we will celebrate the graduation of 34 professionals who participated in the Kern Institute’s KINETIC3 Teaching Academy. Through monthly workshops, research bootcamps, and individual and collaborative assignments, KINETIC3 participants explored their professional identities as educators. Steinert et al. (2019) assert, “to achieve excellence in teaching and learning, faculty members [and other health professionals] need to embrace their identities as teachers and be supported in doing so by their institutions and by faculty development.” 

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Perspective/Opinion


Learning about wisdom as a KINETIC3 observer



By Sandra Pfister, PhD


Observe (verb): To watch carefully the way something happens or the way someone does something, especially in order to learn more about it


Looking up how a dictionary defines 'observe' was the catch I needed to write my perspective on what it entails to be Teaching Observation Navigator (ON'or). I was pretty sure I knew what it meant to observe someone teaching especially from the process perspective: Volunteer to be an observer, get paired with a participant of The Kern Institite’s KINETIC 3 Teaching Academy and then find the time to be the observer. Would it be virtual or in person? Could it happen in real time, or would it need to be an observation of a recorded presentation? Once that is all established, then look at participant's learning objectives and what they hope to accomplish. Considering the definition above, I knew I would need to watch carefully but I am not sure I recognized that I would be learning too. And yet that is what happened. My two very different teaching observations examples will explain what I mean. And by sharing with others, I hopefully entice a person to see what they can learn (maybe just about themselves) as an observer in K3.

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Perspective/Opinion


From KINETIC3 trainee to faculty in the new MCWFusionTM Curriculum





By Melanie Gartz, PhD, MS, MHS




Participating in the KINETIC3 program gave me knowledge and skills that I would later tap into as I transitioned from my fellowship into a teaching faculty position…


2022 Was a Year of Big Changes for me Professionally…


Since completing the Kern Institute’s Kinetic3 Teaching Academy in 2022, I have transitioned from my postdoctoral fellowship to Assistant Professor in the Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy, where I am part of the teaching faculty team. The program introduced me to educational terminology and techniques that I had not previously gained from my education and training. 

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Perspective/Opinion




In search of single notes


By Bryan Johnston, MD




Dr. Johnston shares his early experiences with dynamic moments of learning, the struggle to develop as an educator, and how the Kern Institute’s KINETIC3 Master Educator program helped build his capacity to create these moments for his learners…


I remember sitting at the piano at age 3, trying to recreate the way my mother’s fingers moved across the keys. I smashed down on the keyboard, baffled by the chaotic noise until she guided my hands to the keys, pressing down one by one. I still remember the feeling of the single notes that emerged, how they changed with pressure or duration, how they connected. It was something entirely new, and represented the path from where I had been to where I could be.

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Perspective/Opinion




From Participant to Presenter: How KINETIC3 Transformed my Character Strengths


By Chelsea Weaver, PhD



In this essay, I reflect on how different character strengths were activated and challenged as I transitioned from a KINETIC3 participant to a KINETIC3 instructor …


I am so proud to be graduating from the Medical Educator track of the KINETIC3 Program in June. For two years, I have had the great privilege to learn from some of the most dedicated medical educators imaginable. As I’ve learned, I have been able to directly apply workshop content to my own teaching. But what the KINETIC3 instructors best prepared me for was leading my own KINETIC3 session.


As a participant in KINETIC 3 and due to the rich character education embedded in the program, I could easily identify character strengths that were useful as I progressed. My curiosity was strengthened through my capstone project. My gratitude for the instructors and our fearless leaders, Kristina and Vivian, was evident each time I reflected on a workshop or activity. From the very love of learning that I think makes me a strong educator emerged excitement each day that we had a KINETIC3 session. Finally, the strong teamwork component allowed me to build my network, express kindness, and continuously adjust my perspective throughout the past 2 years. 

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Perspective/Opinion




Three Questions


By Bill Henk, EdD



Writing for publication is a highly developed skill that typically requires years to master and can benefit from scholarly mentoring. Read about a longtime professional educator who is eager to share his knowledge about writing success honed over several decades as a faculty member and academic administrator in higher education… 

 

What is your role with the Kern Institute and what goals do you have for that work?


What is your background in academic writing and how did you come to do this kind of work? 


What do you enjoy about academic writing? 

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In Praise of Virtue

By Jack Coulehan, MD



A student twitches in her seat,

irked at my wasting her time.

Fidelity, fortitude, compassion—

what a moldy scent they exude!

She wants content, words cut

from a block of granite, words

built with bricks from the ground up,

not old sheets waving in the wind.

Virtue! No wonder she Googles

an alternate route. To her, virtue

is either fraudulent, or a track

too deep in the thalamus

to count. Pixel by pixel,

my student fades, and I start

to blurt, Wait! Wait! But don’t.

I yearn to juggle four words

at once while walking on stilts,

to twist my face into a clown's

and capture her attention, to make

her giggle with delight, but

only a wisp remains in the room.

Too late. I wanted to warn her

that words with cleats on their soles

grind and abrade. Too soon.

I wanted to show her the bruises.



JAMA. 2010;304(20):2218. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.1540

Submit a Poem for Next Week

Inaugural William Choi Lectureship

Humility, Creativity, Allyship, and Justice

Rita Charon, MD, PhD


Friday, June 2, 2023

8:00am - 9:00am

Bolger Auditorium- H1400 & Zoom



The Department of Medicine and Kern Institute present the William Choi Lecture Series. This series aims to establish an annual visiting lectureship focusing on the intersection between medicine and the humanities. The inaugural speaker for this series is Dr. Rita Charon.


Rita Charon is a general internist and literary scholar who originated the field of narrative medicine. She is Professor and Founding Chair of the Department of Medical Humanities and Ethics and Professor of Medicine at Columbia University. Her research focuses on the consequences of narrative medicine practice, narrative medicine pedagogy, and health care team effectiveness. She has lectured and served as Visiting Professor at many medical schools and universities in the US and abroad, teaching narrative medicine theory and practice.

KICS Medical Education Journal Club 


Friday, June 14, 2023

12:15pm - 1:00pm

Zoom


Register to join us at our monthly Kern Institute Collaboration for Scholarship Medical Education Journal Club! Each month, we discuss recent medical education scholarship with its author for a lively, intimate conversation about the transformation of medical education. This month Dr. Anthony Artino the Associate Dean for Evaluation and Education Research at George Washington University will be discussing how to develop effective surveys for medical education research.

Register Here
The Transformational Times publishes weekly, delivering stories of hope, character and resilience to our virtual community.

Jeff Fritz, PhDEditor-in-Chief



Editorial Board: Bruce Campbell, MDKathlyn Fletcher, MD, Adina Kalet, MD, Wendy Peltier, MD, Karen Herzog, Justine Espisito, Julia Bosco, Linda Nwumeh, Wolf Pulsiano, Sophie Voss, & Emelyn Zaworski


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