Supervision of Occupational Therapy Level II Fieldwork Students: Impact on and Predictors of Clinician Productivity

This study aimed to determine whether a difference in productivity exists between clinicians supervising and not supervising a Level II occupational therapy student and whether factors including clinician years of experience, practice setting, and clinician productivity without a student could predi...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of occupational therapy 2015-01, Vol.69 (1), p.6901260010p1-6901260010p7
Hauptverfasser: Ozelie, Rebecca, Janow, Janet, Kreutz, Corinne, Mulry, Mary Kate, Penkala, Ashley
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study aimed to determine whether a difference in productivity exists between clinicians supervising and not supervising a Level II occupational therapy student and whether factors including clinician years of experience, practice setting, and clinician productivity without a student could predict clinician productivity while supervising a student. We used paired-sample t tests to examine clinician productivity with and without a student in 109 clinician-student encounters and regression analysis to determine factors predictive of clinician productivity with a student. Results indicated no difference in clinician productivity with or without a student. Clinician years of experience, practice area, and productivity without a student were significant predictors of clinician productivity while supervising a student. Study results contradict the belief that supervising Level II fieldwork students lowers clinicians' productivity. Findings suggest that practice area and productivity without a student are important factors influencing the productivity of clinicians supervising a fieldwork student.
ISSN:0272-9490
1943-7676
DOI:10.5014/ajot.2015.013532