Publication | Closed Access
An Investigation of the Use of E‐Mail as a Supplemental Modality for Clinical Supervision
50
Citations
31
References
2004
Year
Family MedicineCounselingEducationSupervision (Telephony)Educational CommunicationClinical SupervisionTeacher EducationHealth CommunicationSupplemental ModalityDigital HealthPersonalized LearningPersonalization MessagesNursingCounselor SupervisionPerformance StudiesTeachingInstructional CommunicationSupervision SystemProfessional DevelopmentClinical PracticeProfessional Behavior CategoryArts
The authors investigated the use of student‐initiated e‐mail as a supplemental modality for supervision. Nineteen students e‐mailed their instructors weekly during their 15‐week practicum; these e‐mails were analyzed across 3 time periods using the categories of the discrimination model (J. M. Bernard, 1979, 1997) and an adaptation of W. Lanning's (1986) professional behavior category. Although patterns of e‐mails were similar across time, there was a significant decline in the number of e‐mails as the practicum progressed. Significance was found for message focus, with personalization messages and professional behavior/practicum class messages accounting for more than half of the messages across 3 time periods.
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