MINI INTERVIEWS U.S. medical school to use the MMI for the entire incoming class. That puts UC Davis Vice Chancellor Claire Pomeroy described at the vanguard of the medical admissions the MMI concept in an article that appeared process,” Sousa said. on UC Davis Health System’s “Insider” (see “An applicant’s disappointing http://intranet.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/ucdhs/ performance in one MMI station doesn’t vcupdate/2010/09/9-20-10.shtml). carry the same weight as with the The UC Davis School of Medicine traditional interview. He or she has nine uses the MMI to interview 20 applicants other stations in which to do well,” Sousa every Friday in the Clinical Skills observed. “With the MMI method, key Center. Applicants rotate through a qualitative information about applicants “circuit” of 10 stations. Each station is is gathered in a systematic, structured a timed, eight-minute encounter, with manner.” a two-minute respite between. Unlike interviewers in traditional long-form sessions who have access to the academic records of interviewees, their MMI counterparts (called “raters”) are “blinded” from that information to diminish potential bias. Rather than assessing medical knowledge, the MMI discerns the ability of candidates to analyze problems, see multiple sides of an issue, work in a team, communicate and exhibit passion for medicine. Sousa and Henderson performed Mark Henderson, the UC Davis School much of the groundwork that led to the of Medicine’s associate dean for Admissions, School of Medicine’s implementation of the observed that under the traditional MMI. After an advance team composed of interview system, the two interviewers Sousa, Admissions Selection Subcommittee who meet with each candidate frequently Chair Theodore Wun and Office of disagree in their assessment. Medical Education Manager Gurmeet “The MMI, in contrast, exposes each “Roy” Rai observed the MMI in operation applicant to 10 raters, yielding more at the University of Cincinnati College independent observations about each of Medicine, the commitment to move candidate,” Henderson said. “The raters forward for the 2010-11 admissions cycle focus on communication and problemwas finalized. The entire Office of Medical solving skills – unbiased by academic Education staff, particularly from the Office records.” of Admissions and the clinical skills suite, Henderson credits longtime admissions was instrumental in implementing MMI in committee member Francis Sousa for such a short time. his leadership in initiating the MMI for Rai said that because some elements the 2010-11 admissions cycle. A survey of the MMI process can make it seem of a wide range of School of Medicine impersonal, UC Davis has made some community members helped identify a set important modifications to tailor the MMI of values and qualities important in medical and the entire interview day experience to students and future physicians. Sousa, a create a more welcoming environment. clinical professor of ophthalmology and “A week in advance, we e-mail appliinternal medicine, helped select and modify cants detailed instructions explaining how the MMI scenarios to reflect the School of our MMI works,” Rai said, noting that one Medicine’s mission. of the 10 stations called “pathway to medi“The MMI is more fair and cine” is unstructured and gives applicants comprehensive than the traditional longthe opportunity to tell their story. Current interview model. We are only the second FROM PAGE 1 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev students organize and give tours of UC Davis facilities, and host applicants during lunch time. In addition, Henderson personally meets with applicants in groups of five for an hour in an informal session. “Dr. Henderson is committed to meeting all applicants throughout the admissions cycle each year, and I know of no other medical school dean of admissions who does that,” Rai added. Last spring, the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing developed and implemented its own rotational interview process that was inspired by the McMaster University model as well as innovative approaches in use at other nursing schools. Candidates for the nursing school’s Ph.D. program rotated through eight stations at which raters were unaware of applicants’ backgrounds, grades or qualifications. Deborah Ward, associate dean of the School of Nursing, said that the rotational approach is intended to give the admissions committee insights about each candidate’s career goals and aspirations rather than simply verifying academic qualifications. “The questions at each station address the applicants’ alignment with the School of Nursing’s core values: leadership development, interprofessional and interdisciplinary education, transformative research, cultural inclusiveness, and innovative technology, as well as teaching and interpersonal skills,” Ward explained. “We opted for this process because it gives the student candidate a better opportunity to be more engaged in the process than what is typically seen in a panel or single-person interview,” Ward observed. “It also provides opportunity for applicants to respond to a variety of questions and case situations, demonstrating many aspects of their knowledge and experiences.” The schools of nursing and medicine will conduct ongoing monitoring and analysis to gauge the outcomes of the rotational process. UC Davis Health System Faculty Development Office 2921 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400 Sacramento, CA 95817 Published by the Faculty Development Office DECEMBER 2010 – JANUARY 2011 Workshops and other activities You are invited! We encourage you to enroll in one of the various workshops, programs and events sponsored by the Faculty Development Office. For more event details and to register, visit www.ucdmc.ucdavis. edu/facultydev/ and click Enroll Online. (Event co-sponsors are indicated within parentheses.) Volunteer Clinical Faculty members are also welcome and encouraged to attend faculty development events. facultyNEWSLETTER December Published by the Faculty Development Office, which administers and coordinates programs that respond to the professional and career development needs of UC Davis Health System faculty members. 1 Application Deadline: Dean’s Excellence Awards 7 Breakfast With the Dean 2921 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400 Sacramento, CA 95817 (916) 703-9230 www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev/ 10 Scientific Writing for Publication (JCLP) January Edward Callahan, Ph.D. Associate Dean for Academic Personnel Medical and nursing school admissions officials have long grappled with a monumental task: selecting the best applicants from among thousands of academically qualified candidates who have the greatest promise to succeed and thrive. The task involves evaluation of far more than objective, quantifiable and easily measurable academic criteria. Predictors of performance also encompass many subjective, global characteristics, including communication skills, compassion, ethical decision making, collegiality, maturity, cultural sensitivity, empathy, critical thinking skills, powers of observation, and decisiveness under pressure. These and other essential characteristics may be difficult to discern during traditional one-on-one interviews in which an applicant responds to a predictable battery of questions during a session lasting 45 minutes to an hour. That’s one reason why UC Davis admissions officials took notice of a radically different approach in which candidates interpret and respond to a series of “real-life” situations. The method, known as the “multiple mini-interview” (MMI) process, was devised in 2002 by McMaster University of Ontario, Canada. The approach has since been adopted and studied by other schools in Canada, Australia, and the United States. Last spring, the UC Davis School of Medicine purchased a license to use a bank of scenarios that McMaster validated, and began implementing the MMI for the 2010-11 application cycle. CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 19 Faculty Forward Advisory Committee February Cheryl Busman Program Representative, Faculty Development cheryl.busman@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu 8 Workshop: Putting Together Your Academic Packet 11 Mental Models (JCLP) EditPros LLC Writing and Editing www.editpros.com 23 Workshop: Family-Friendly and Career Flexibility Policies Save the date: March 1 Dean’s Recognition Reception Event co-sponsor JCLP: Junior Career Leadership Program facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev MMI places UC Davis at vanguard of the admissions process 14 Time Management Skills (JCLP) Gregg Servis, M.Div. Director, Faculty Development gregg.servis@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu 5 ROTATIONAL MINI INTERVIEWS BEGUN 6 The School of Medicine’s MMI team members include (from left) Ed Dagang, admissions director; Joanna Garcia, MMI coordinator; Denise Nelson, interim MMI support; Lanina Sanders, admissions support; Francis Sousa, MMI training and development director; Gurmeet “Roy” Rai, chief administrative officer; and Mark Henderson (inset photo), associate dean fpr admissions. The team also includes Kendra Harris, director of clinical education; and Haydee Pineda-Johnson, standard patient administrator. (Photo by Emi Manning) officeVISIT NEUROLOGIST RICHARD RIEMER GIVES PATIENTS AND HIS STUDENTS BEST SHOT “You miss 100 percent of the shots you never take.” Ice hockey great Wayne Gretzky made that observation, and neurologist Richard B. Riemer, D.O., has found that that observation can apply not only to competition on the ice, but also to interactions with patients, to medical treatments, and to career advancement. Riemer is an award-winning volunteer clinical faculty member who teaches in the UC Davis Department of Neurology’s outpatient continuity clinic and is active in the department’s Traumatic Brain Injury Research Consortium. In addition to owning and operating a private neurologic and neuro-rehabilitation practice in Sacramento, he fulfills prominent roles in representing the statewide interests of osteopathic physicians and surgeons. As part of their four years of traditional medical training, osteopathic physicians undergo intensive training in the musculoskeletal system. In his referral-based practice, Riemer diagnoses and treats many neurologic conditions, including traumatic brain injury, diseases of the spine, peripheral nerve and muscular disorders, and a host of neurologic complications that follow injuries and trauma. “My referrals come predominantly from physician colleagues with patients who need to see a neurologist who has expertise in musculoskeletal structures,” said Riemer (pronounced REE-mer). After considering a career in medical research, Riemer decided to pursue a D.O. degree because he wanted to work with people and he greatly appreciated the care he was given by an osteopathic physician. He declined acceptance notices from several medical schools, choosing instead to attend Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine in Missouri – the nation’s oldest osteopathic educational institution, founded in 1892. Only 5 percent of viewPOINT A WELCOME TO NEW FACULTY COLLEAGUES By Amparo Villablanca and Lydia P. Howell Jessica Ferranti CAREER-FLEXIBILITY POLICIES NEED AWARENESS AND ENCOURAGEMENT Alan Shindel Each edition of the Faculty Newsletter introduces several faculty colleagues who recently joined the UC Davis Health System community. Watch for more new clinical and research staff members in the next issue. associate medical director of Sutter PRIDE, a rehabilitation program for traumatic spine injury patients; and exam commissioner for the State Board of Medical Examiners. He serves as medical director for the Schools Insurance Authority Workers’ Compensation Department, which represents the interests of 50 Northern California school districts; is the program director for the Sutter Back Pain Program; and serves on numerous committees for the Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons of California. Those and other activities, including teaching at UC Davis, offer ways in which Riemer can contribute to society. physicians in the United States have In his teaching, Riemer emphasizes the D.O. degrees, according to the American subtleties of human interaction. Association of Colleges of Osteopathic “In this information age, facts can be Medicine. Riemer found that distinction easily collected from traditional or online appealing, and relished the concentrated resources. But I can influence how a training he received in musculoskeletal young physician thinks about and frames biomechanics. the medical issue. When the student After receiving his D.O. degree in makes a connection or thinks about an 1984, he served a medical internship at issue in a novel way, you witness the an osteopathic-accredited facility, Tucson mental epiphany. For me, this is the most General Hospital, along with the University rewarding contribution I can make as a of Arizona Health Science Center. The teacher,” Riemer said. following year he gained acceptance as the “I’m thankful for the opportunity the first D.O. resident at UC Davis. UC Davis Department of Neurology gave When he completed his residency in me during my residency, and for the 1988 he joined an established neurologic volunteers who taught me. Returning the practice. Two years later, with the help of favor is part of community service for a his wife, Ronni – who had earned an MBA physician,” added Riemer, who for two degree – he established his own practice. consecutive years (2008-09 and 2009-10) Ronni remains the office manager of the has received an Outstanding Teaching practice. The couple, celebrating 30 years Award by a vote of residents and fellows in of marriage, have one son, Ryan, who the Department of Neurology and recently recently completed undergraduate studies was promoted to professor of clinical in political science at University of San neurology. Francisco. Riemer’s interest in teaching extends to Even while launching his practice, the hockey arena. The athletic physician Riemer became entrenched in numerous and former competitive hockey player mainother professional activities. He has tains his certification from USA Hockey to served as secretary-treasurer and then teach and coach kids through high school vice president of the Greater Sacramento level, and complements his on-ice activities Osteopathic Medical Association; the with jogging and weight lifting. facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev facultyROUNDS Earlier this year we began work on a National Institutes of Health-funded study titled “Women’s Careers in Biomedical Sciences: Family-Friendly Policies and Career Flexibility” (see February-March 2010 Faculty Newsletter). Under that grant, we are conducting an ongoing survey of male and female faculty members in the schools of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, and in the College of Biological Sciences. We asked these faculty physicians and scientists about their awareness of, usage and satisfaction with specific career flexibility options available to them. Those options include allowances for child bearing, rearing, adoption, family care, personal illness, disability, tenure clock extension, and part-time appointments. Our baseline survey found that faculty overall have very low Lydia Howell awareness of Jessica Ferranti establishes expertise in forensic psychiatry sexual desire disorder and other male anatomic change over the course of radiation therapy. Her investigations are sexual health conditions. intended to lead to improvements in “I use a couple-centered approach to treatment delivery accuracy and in the sexual problems that involves the man’s Expertise in forensic criminal quality of radiation therapy treatment. Cui partner in the process and addresses both investigations has placed Jessica also is interested in ways to improve data biological and psycho-emotional aspects Ferranti, M.D., in demand as a sharing capabilities between institutions of the concern,” Shindel explained. forensic psychiatry expert witness and among different software applications. A 2008-2009 American Urologic on the California Superior Court She is eligible for certification by Association Foundation Research Scholar, expert witness panels in Sacramento, the American Board of Radiology in Shindel plans to conduct research studies Yolo, Placer, Alameda, and Contra therapeutic radiologic physics. of alternative medicines, notably icariin Costa counties. Ferranti, an assistant (an extract of horny goat weed) for clinical professor in the Department • The director of gastroenterology and treatment of male sexual problems. He of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences’ hepatology at the UC Davis Health also intends to investigate the roles that Division of Psychiatry and the Law, System’ s Folsom primary-care facility is lifestyle and dietary factors may play in practices general adult as well as Nirmal S. Mann, M.D., a professor of the management of sexual concerns. forensic psychiatry. She also is the internal medicine and gastroenterology associate training director of the UC Other new colleagues with expertise in endoscopy. He also is Davis general psychiatry residency a senior consultant in gastroenterologytraining program, and teaches and • Khyati Brahmbhatt, M.D., an hepatology at UC Davis Medical Center. supervises psychiatry residents in the assistant clinical professor of The Royal College of Physicians of outpatient psychiatry clinic. psychiatry and behavioral sciences, Canada has certified him as fellow and Ferranti teaches aspects of forensic practices child and adolescent as a specialist in internal medicine psychiatry including workplace psychiatry. She treats medically ill and gastroenterology. Mann, who has violence, legal aspects of substance children and anxiety disorders on conducted research in acute pancreatitis, abuse and sexual harassment. Her an outpatient basis, and performs peptic ulcers and therapeutic endoscopy, research interests encompass psychotic inpatient consultations at the UC is investigating application of the violence, forensic evaluation of Davis Medical Center. She also is a hydrogen breath test in irritable bowel deception and malingering, and gender hospital staff psychiatrist at Shriners disease. differences in violent criminal offenders. Hospitals for Children – Northern Alan Shindel treats male California. Brahmbhatt is board• Kai Yang, Ph.D., an assistant adjunct reproductive and sexual certified in adult psychiatry, and professor of radiology, concentrates on board-eligible in child and adolescent disorders diagnostic X-ray imaging research. An psychiatry. expert in image quality evaluation and Urologist Alan W. Shindel, M.D., improvement, he is interested in imaging who specializes in andrology – the • Medical physicist Jing Cui, D.Sc., applications using X-ray computed study of men’s reproductive and an assistant professor of radiation tomography (CT). Yang has been sexual health – has joined the medical oncology, has expertise in imageworking on development and evaluation staff of the new UC Davis Men’s guided radiation therapy and beam of dedicated breast CT scanners for Health Program. Shindel, an assistant modeling. Her research interests also early breast cancer detection, as well professor of urology, treats patients for include Monte Carlo dose calculation as application of micro-CT for tissue erectile dysfunction, Peyronie’s disease, and patient dose change caused by specimen imaging. premature ejaculation, hypoactive 2 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev these policies; liked, indicating that academic medical consequently, careers have a major influence on use is also low. personal aspects of women’s lives. Women In contrast, indicated that they have hesitated to faculty members utilize the policies to avoid burdening participating colleagues or because they worry about in the survey repercussions. ranked these We encourage faculty members to policies as stimulate change by learning more about important to policies. Ask your department chairs, their career managers and academic personnel office Amparo Villablanca satisfaction, staff members about leave policies, and recruitment use the policy benefits if you need them. and retention. That disparity indicates We also encourage faculty members to the need to increase promotion of these support each other in use of these policies, policies. so that we can create a culture that values More than 75 percent of our male and personal life as well as professional life. female respondents reported increased Lastly, we urge departments to bring satisfaction with UC Davis as a place to these policies to the attention of faculty work merely because of the existence of members. We have prepared a brochure these policies – regardless of whether they that all faculty will receive and should might use them. utilize, and are enhancing a website Even so, data from the Office of the (www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/academic/ Dean showed that no men had used personnel/academicleaves.html) with family-supportive policies during the policy information. past three years. Our survey also revealed We will be re-surveying each spring, significantly more women than men so please retake our survey when it is who are childless or who say they had offered so that we can measure changes fewer children than they might have in use and satisfaction, evaluate effects on academic advancement, and drive adjustments in policy implementation. Amparo C. Villablanca is professor and Lazda Endowed Chair in Women’s Cardiovascular Medicine; director of the Women’s Cardiovascular Medicine Program; and associate director of the Women’s Center for Health. This excerpt from a presentation that Villablanca and Howell prepared shows that awareness of family-supportive policies is low among female as well as male faculty members. 3 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev Lydia P. Howell is professor and chair of the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. 4 officeVISIT NEUROLOGIST RICHARD RIEMER GIVES PATIENTS AND HIS STUDENTS BEST SHOT “You miss 100 percent of the shots you never take.” Ice hockey great Wayne Gretzky made that observation, and neurologist Richard B. Riemer, D.O., has found that that observation can apply not only to competition on the ice, but also to interactions with patients, to medical treatments, and to career advancement. Riemer is an award-winning volunteer clinical faculty member who teaches in the UC Davis Department of Neurology’s outpatient continuity clinic and is active in the department’s Traumatic Brain Injury Research Consortium. In addition to owning and operating a private neurologic and neuro-rehabilitation practice in Sacramento, he fulfills prominent roles in representing the statewide interests of osteopathic physicians and surgeons. As part of their four years of traditional medical training, osteopathic physicians undergo intensive training in the musculoskeletal system. In his referral-based practice, Riemer diagnoses and treats many neurologic conditions, including traumatic brain injury, diseases of the spine, peripheral nerve and muscular disorders, and a host of neurologic complications that follow injuries and trauma. “My referrals come predominantly from physician colleagues with patients who need to see a neurologist who has expertise in musculoskeletal structures,” said Riemer (pronounced REE-mer). After considering a career in medical research, Riemer decided to pursue a D.O. degree because he wanted to work with people and he greatly appreciated the care he was given by an osteopathic physician. He declined acceptance notices from several medical schools, choosing instead to attend Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine in Missouri – the nation’s oldest osteopathic educational institution, founded in 1892. Only 5 percent of viewPOINT A WELCOME TO NEW FACULTY COLLEAGUES By Amparo Villablanca and Lydia P. Howell Jessica Ferranti CAREER-FLEXIBILITY POLICIES NEED AWARENESS AND ENCOURAGEMENT Alan Shindel Each edition of the Faculty Newsletter introduces several faculty colleagues who recently joined the UC Davis Health System community. Watch for more new clinical and research staff members in the next issue. associate medical director of Sutter PRIDE, a rehabilitation program for traumatic spine injury patients; and exam commissioner for the State Board of Medical Examiners. He serves as medical director for the Schools Insurance Authority Workers’ Compensation Department, which represents the interests of 50 Northern California school districts; is the program director for the Sutter Back Pain Program; and serves on numerous committees for the Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons of California. Those and other activities, including teaching at UC Davis, offer ways in which Riemer can contribute to society. physicians in the United States have In his teaching, Riemer emphasizes the D.O. degrees, according to the American subtleties of human interaction. Association of Colleges of Osteopathic “In this information age, facts can be Medicine. Riemer found that distinction easily collected from traditional or online appealing, and relished the concentrated resources. But I can influence how a training he received in musculoskeletal young physician thinks about and frames biomechanics. the medical issue. When the student After receiving his D.O. degree in makes a connection or thinks about an 1984, he served a medical internship at issue in a novel way, you witness the an osteopathic-accredited facility, Tucson mental epiphany. For me, this is the most General Hospital, along with the University rewarding contribution I can make as a of Arizona Health Science Center. The teacher,” Riemer said. following year he gained acceptance as the “I’m thankful for the opportunity the first D.O. resident at UC Davis. UC Davis Department of Neurology gave When he completed his residency in me during my residency, and for the 1988 he joined an established neurologic volunteers who taught me. Returning the practice. Two years later, with the help of favor is part of community service for a his wife, Ronni – who had earned an MBA physician,” added Riemer, who for two degree – he established his own practice. consecutive years (2008-09 and 2009-10) Ronni remains the office manager of the has received an Outstanding Teaching practice. The couple, celebrating 30 years Award by a vote of residents and fellows in of marriage, have one son, Ryan, who the Department of Neurology and recently recently completed undergraduate studies was promoted to professor of clinical in political science at University of San neurology. Francisco. Riemer’s interest in teaching extends to Even while launching his practice, the hockey arena. The athletic physician Riemer became entrenched in numerous and former competitive hockey player mainother professional activities. He has tains his certification from USA Hockey to served as secretary-treasurer and then teach and coach kids through high school vice president of the Greater Sacramento level, and complements his on-ice activities Osteopathic Medical Association; the with jogging and weight lifting. facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev facultyROUNDS Earlier this year we began work on a National Institutes of Health-funded study titled “Women’s Careers in Biomedical Sciences: Family-Friendly Policies and Career Flexibility” (see February-March 2010 Faculty Newsletter). Under that grant, we are conducting an ongoing survey of male and female faculty members in the schools of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, and in the College of Biological Sciences. We asked these faculty physicians and scientists about their awareness of, usage and satisfaction with specific career flexibility options available to them. Those options include allowances for child bearing, rearing, adoption, family care, personal illness, disability, tenure clock extension, and part-time appointments. Our baseline survey found that faculty overall have very low Lydia Howell awareness of Jessica Ferranti establishes expertise in forensic psychiatry sexual desire disorder and other male anatomic change over the course of radiation therapy. Her investigations are sexual health conditions. intended to lead to improvements in “I use a couple-centered approach to treatment delivery accuracy and in the sexual problems that involves the man’s Expertise in forensic criminal quality of radiation therapy treatment. Cui partner in the process and addresses both investigations has placed Jessica also is interested in ways to improve data biological and psycho-emotional aspects Ferranti, M.D., in demand as a sharing capabilities between institutions of the concern,” Shindel explained. forensic psychiatry expert witness and among different software applications. A 2008-2009 American Urologic on the California Superior Court She is eligible for certification by Association Foundation Research Scholar, expert witness panels in Sacramento, the American Board of Radiology in Shindel plans to conduct research studies Yolo, Placer, Alameda, and Contra therapeutic radiologic physics. of alternative medicines, notably icariin Costa counties. Ferranti, an assistant (an extract of horny goat weed) for clinical professor in the Department • The director of gastroenterology and treatment of male sexual problems. He of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences’ hepatology at the UC Davis Health also intends to investigate the roles that Division of Psychiatry and the Law, System’ s Folsom primary-care facility is lifestyle and dietary factors may play in practices general adult as well as Nirmal S. Mann, M.D., a professor of the management of sexual concerns. forensic psychiatry. She also is the internal medicine and gastroenterology associate training director of the UC Other new colleagues with expertise in endoscopy. He also is Davis general psychiatry residency a senior consultant in gastroenterologytraining program, and teaches and • Khyati Brahmbhatt, M.D., an hepatology at UC Davis Medical Center. supervises psychiatry residents in the assistant clinical professor of The Royal College of Physicians of outpatient psychiatry clinic. psychiatry and behavioral sciences, Canada has certified him as fellow and Ferranti teaches aspects of forensic practices child and adolescent as a specialist in internal medicine psychiatry including workplace psychiatry. She treats medically ill and gastroenterology. Mann, who has violence, legal aspects of substance children and anxiety disorders on conducted research in acute pancreatitis, abuse and sexual harassment. Her an outpatient basis, and performs peptic ulcers and therapeutic endoscopy, research interests encompass psychotic inpatient consultations at the UC is investigating application of the violence, forensic evaluation of Davis Medical Center. She also is a hydrogen breath test in irritable bowel deception and malingering, and gender hospital staff psychiatrist at Shriners disease. differences in violent criminal offenders. Hospitals for Children – Northern Alan Shindel treats male California. Brahmbhatt is board• Kai Yang, Ph.D., an assistant adjunct reproductive and sexual certified in adult psychiatry, and professor of radiology, concentrates on board-eligible in child and adolescent disorders diagnostic X-ray imaging research. An psychiatry. expert in image quality evaluation and Urologist Alan W. Shindel, M.D., improvement, he is interested in imaging who specializes in andrology – the • Medical physicist Jing Cui, D.Sc., applications using X-ray computed study of men’s reproductive and an assistant professor of radiation tomography (CT). Yang has been sexual health – has joined the medical oncology, has expertise in imageworking on development and evaluation staff of the new UC Davis Men’s guided radiation therapy and beam of dedicated breast CT scanners for Health Program. Shindel, an assistant modeling. Her research interests also early breast cancer detection, as well professor of urology, treats patients for include Monte Carlo dose calculation as application of micro-CT for tissue erectile dysfunction, Peyronie’s disease, and patient dose change caused by specimen imaging. premature ejaculation, hypoactive 2 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev these policies; liked, indicating that academic medical consequently, careers have a major influence on use is also low. personal aspects of women’s lives. Women In contrast, indicated that they have hesitated to faculty members utilize the policies to avoid burdening participating colleagues or because they worry about in the survey repercussions. ranked these We encourage faculty members to policies as stimulate change by learning more about important to policies. Ask your department chairs, their career managers and academic personnel office Amparo Villablanca satisfaction, staff members about leave policies, and recruitment use the policy benefits if you need them. and retention. That disparity indicates We also encourage faculty members to the need to increase promotion of these support each other in use of these policies, policies. so that we can create a culture that values More than 75 percent of our male and personal life as well as professional life. female respondents reported increased Lastly, we urge departments to bring satisfaction with UC Davis as a place to these policies to the attention of faculty work merely because of the existence of members. We have prepared a brochure these policies – regardless of whether they that all faculty will receive and should might use them. utilize, and are enhancing a website Even so, data from the Office of the (www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/academic/ Dean showed that no men had used personnel/academicleaves.html) with family-supportive policies during the policy information. past three years. Our survey also revealed We will be re-surveying each spring, significantly more women than men so please retake our survey when it is who are childless or who say they had offered so that we can measure changes fewer children than they might have in use and satisfaction, evaluate effects on academic advancement, and drive adjustments in policy implementation. Amparo C. Villablanca is professor and Lazda Endowed Chair in Women’s Cardiovascular Medicine; director of the Women’s Cardiovascular Medicine Program; and associate director of the Women’s Center for Health. This excerpt from a presentation that Villablanca and Howell prepared shows that awareness of family-supportive policies is low among female as well as male faculty members. 3 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev Lydia P. Howell is professor and chair of the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. 4 officeVISIT NEUROLOGIST RICHARD RIEMER GIVES PATIENTS AND HIS STUDENTS BEST SHOT “You miss 100 percent of the shots you never take.” Ice hockey great Wayne Gretzky made that observation, and neurologist Richard B. Riemer, D.O., has found that that observation can apply not only to competition on the ice, but also to interactions with patients, to medical treatments, and to career advancement. Riemer is an award-winning volunteer clinical faculty member who teaches in the UC Davis Department of Neurology’s outpatient continuity clinic and is active in the department’s Traumatic Brain Injury Research Consortium. In addition to owning and operating a private neurologic and neuro-rehabilitation practice in Sacramento, he fulfills prominent roles in representing the statewide interests of osteopathic physicians and surgeons. As part of their four years of traditional medical training, osteopathic physicians undergo intensive training in the musculoskeletal system. In his referral-based practice, Riemer diagnoses and treats many neurologic conditions, including traumatic brain injury, diseases of the spine, peripheral nerve and muscular disorders, and a host of neurologic complications that follow injuries and trauma. “My referrals come predominantly from physician colleagues with patients who need to see a neurologist who has expertise in musculoskeletal structures,” said Riemer (pronounced REE-mer). After considering a career in medical research, Riemer decided to pursue a D.O. degree because he wanted to work with people and he greatly appreciated the care he was given by an osteopathic physician. He declined acceptance notices from several medical schools, choosing instead to attend Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine in Missouri – the nation’s oldest osteopathic educational institution, founded in 1892. Only 5 percent of viewPOINT A WELCOME TO NEW FACULTY COLLEAGUES By Amparo Villablanca and Lydia P. Howell Jessica Ferranti CAREER-FLEXIBILITY POLICIES NEED AWARENESS AND ENCOURAGEMENT Alan Shindel Each edition of the Faculty Newsletter introduces several faculty colleagues who recently joined the UC Davis Health System community. Watch for more new clinical and research staff members in the next issue. associate medical director of Sutter PRIDE, a rehabilitation program for traumatic spine injury patients; and exam commissioner for the State Board of Medical Examiners. He serves as medical director for the Schools Insurance Authority Workers’ Compensation Department, which represents the interests of 50 Northern California school districts; is the program director for the Sutter Back Pain Program; and serves on numerous committees for the Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons of California. Those and other activities, including teaching at UC Davis, offer ways in which Riemer can contribute to society. physicians in the United States have In his teaching, Riemer emphasizes the D.O. degrees, according to the American subtleties of human interaction. Association of Colleges of Osteopathic “In this information age, facts can be Medicine. Riemer found that distinction easily collected from traditional or online appealing, and relished the concentrated resources. But I can influence how a training he received in musculoskeletal young physician thinks about and frames biomechanics. the medical issue. When the student After receiving his D.O. degree in makes a connection or thinks about an 1984, he served a medical internship at issue in a novel way, you witness the an osteopathic-accredited facility, Tucson mental epiphany. For me, this is the most General Hospital, along with the University rewarding contribution I can make as a of Arizona Health Science Center. The teacher,” Riemer said. following year he gained acceptance as the “I’m thankful for the opportunity the first D.O. resident at UC Davis. UC Davis Department of Neurology gave When he completed his residency in me during my residency, and for the 1988 he joined an established neurologic volunteers who taught me. Returning the practice. Two years later, with the help of favor is part of community service for a his wife, Ronni – who had earned an MBA physician,” added Riemer, who for two degree – he established his own practice. consecutive years (2008-09 and 2009-10) Ronni remains the office manager of the has received an Outstanding Teaching practice. The couple, celebrating 30 years Award by a vote of residents and fellows in of marriage, have one son, Ryan, who the Department of Neurology and recently recently completed undergraduate studies was promoted to professor of clinical in political science at University of San neurology. Francisco. Riemer’s interest in teaching extends to Even while launching his practice, the hockey arena. The athletic physician Riemer became entrenched in numerous and former competitive hockey player mainother professional activities. He has tains his certification from USA Hockey to served as secretary-treasurer and then teach and coach kids through high school vice president of the Greater Sacramento level, and complements his on-ice activities Osteopathic Medical Association; the with jogging and weight lifting. facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev facultyROUNDS Earlier this year we began work on a National Institutes of Health-funded study titled “Women’s Careers in Biomedical Sciences: Family-Friendly Policies and Career Flexibility” (see February-March 2010 Faculty Newsletter). Under that grant, we are conducting an ongoing survey of male and female faculty members in the schools of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, and in the College of Biological Sciences. We asked these faculty physicians and scientists about their awareness of, usage and satisfaction with specific career flexibility options available to them. Those options include allowances for child bearing, rearing, adoption, family care, personal illness, disability, tenure clock extension, and part-time appointments. Our baseline survey found that faculty overall have very low Lydia Howell awareness of Jessica Ferranti establishes expertise in forensic psychiatry sexual desire disorder and other male anatomic change over the course of radiation therapy. Her investigations are sexual health conditions. intended to lead to improvements in “I use a couple-centered approach to treatment delivery accuracy and in the sexual problems that involves the man’s Expertise in forensic criminal quality of radiation therapy treatment. Cui partner in the process and addresses both investigations has placed Jessica also is interested in ways to improve data biological and psycho-emotional aspects Ferranti, M.D., in demand as a sharing capabilities between institutions of the concern,” Shindel explained. forensic psychiatry expert witness and among different software applications. A 2008-2009 American Urologic on the California Superior Court She is eligible for certification by Association Foundation Research Scholar, expert witness panels in Sacramento, the American Board of Radiology in Shindel plans to conduct research studies Yolo, Placer, Alameda, and Contra therapeutic radiologic physics. of alternative medicines, notably icariin Costa counties. Ferranti, an assistant (an extract of horny goat weed) for clinical professor in the Department • The director of gastroenterology and treatment of male sexual problems. He of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences’ hepatology at the UC Davis Health also intends to investigate the roles that Division of Psychiatry and the Law, System’ s Folsom primary-care facility is lifestyle and dietary factors may play in practices general adult as well as Nirmal S. Mann, M.D., a professor of the management of sexual concerns. forensic psychiatry. She also is the internal medicine and gastroenterology associate training director of the UC Other new colleagues with expertise in endoscopy. He also is Davis general psychiatry residency a senior consultant in gastroenterologytraining program, and teaches and • Khyati Brahmbhatt, M.D., an hepatology at UC Davis Medical Center. supervises psychiatry residents in the assistant clinical professor of The Royal College of Physicians of outpatient psychiatry clinic. psychiatry and behavioral sciences, Canada has certified him as fellow and Ferranti teaches aspects of forensic practices child and adolescent as a specialist in internal medicine psychiatry including workplace psychiatry. She treats medically ill and gastroenterology. Mann, who has violence, legal aspects of substance children and anxiety disorders on conducted research in acute pancreatitis, abuse and sexual harassment. Her an outpatient basis, and performs peptic ulcers and therapeutic endoscopy, research interests encompass psychotic inpatient consultations at the UC is investigating application of the violence, forensic evaluation of Davis Medical Center. She also is a hydrogen breath test in irritable bowel deception and malingering, and gender hospital staff psychiatrist at Shriners disease. differences in violent criminal offenders. Hospitals for Children – Northern Alan Shindel treats male California. Brahmbhatt is board• Kai Yang, Ph.D., an assistant adjunct reproductive and sexual certified in adult psychiatry, and professor of radiology, concentrates on board-eligible in child and adolescent disorders diagnostic X-ray imaging research. An psychiatry. expert in image quality evaluation and Urologist Alan W. Shindel, M.D., improvement, he is interested in imaging who specializes in andrology – the • Medical physicist Jing Cui, D.Sc., applications using X-ray computed study of men’s reproductive and an assistant professor of radiation tomography (CT). Yang has been sexual health – has joined the medical oncology, has expertise in imageworking on development and evaluation staff of the new UC Davis Men’s guided radiation therapy and beam of dedicated breast CT scanners for Health Program. Shindel, an assistant modeling. Her research interests also early breast cancer detection, as well professor of urology, treats patients for include Monte Carlo dose calculation as application of micro-CT for tissue erectile dysfunction, Peyronie’s disease, and patient dose change caused by specimen imaging. premature ejaculation, hypoactive 2 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev these policies; liked, indicating that academic medical consequently, careers have a major influence on use is also low. personal aspects of women’s lives. Women In contrast, indicated that they have hesitated to faculty members utilize the policies to avoid burdening participating colleagues or because they worry about in the survey repercussions. ranked these We encourage faculty members to policies as stimulate change by learning more about important to policies. Ask your department chairs, their career managers and academic personnel office Amparo Villablanca satisfaction, staff members about leave policies, and recruitment use the policy benefits if you need them. and retention. That disparity indicates We also encourage faculty members to the need to increase promotion of these support each other in use of these policies, policies. so that we can create a culture that values More than 75 percent of our male and personal life as well as professional life. female respondents reported increased Lastly, we urge departments to bring satisfaction with UC Davis as a place to these policies to the attention of faculty work merely because of the existence of members. We have prepared a brochure these policies – regardless of whether they that all faculty will receive and should might use them. utilize, and are enhancing a website Even so, data from the Office of the (www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/academic/ Dean showed that no men had used personnel/academicleaves.html) with family-supportive policies during the policy information. past three years. Our survey also revealed We will be re-surveying each spring, significantly more women than men so please retake our survey when it is who are childless or who say they had offered so that we can measure changes fewer children than they might have in use and satisfaction, evaluate effects on academic advancement, and drive adjustments in policy implementation. Amparo C. Villablanca is professor and Lazda Endowed Chair in Women’s Cardiovascular Medicine; director of the Women’s Cardiovascular Medicine Program; and associate director of the Women’s Center for Health. This excerpt from a presentation that Villablanca and Howell prepared shows that awareness of family-supportive policies is low among female as well as male faculty members. 3 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev Lydia P. Howell is professor and chair of the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. 4 MINI INTERVIEWS U.S. medical school to use the MMI for the entire incoming class. That puts UC Davis Vice Chancellor Claire Pomeroy described at the vanguard of the medical admissions the MMI concept in an article that appeared process,” Sousa said. on UC Davis Health System’s “Insider” (see “An applicant’s disappointing http://intranet.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/ucdhs/ performance in one MMI station doesn’t vcupdate/2010/09/9-20-10.shtml). carry the same weight as with the The UC Davis School of Medicine traditional interview. He or she has nine uses the MMI to interview 20 applicants other stations in which to do well,” Sousa every Friday in the Clinical Skills observed. “With the MMI method, key Center. Applicants rotate through a qualitative information about applicants “circuit” of 10 stations. Each station is is gathered in a systematic, structured a timed, eight-minute encounter, with manner.” a two-minute respite between. Unlike interviewers in traditional long-form sessions who have access to the academic records of interviewees, their MMI counterparts (called “raters”) are “blinded” from that information to diminish potential bias. Rather than assessing medical knowledge, the MMI discerns the ability of candidates to analyze problems, see multiple sides of an issue, work in a team, communicate and exhibit passion for medicine. Sousa and Henderson performed Mark Henderson, the UC Davis School much of the groundwork that led to the of Medicine’s associate dean for Admissions, School of Medicine’s implementation of the observed that under the traditional MMI. After an advance team composed of interview system, the two interviewers Sousa, Admissions Selection Subcommittee who meet with each candidate frequently Chair Theodore Wun and Office of disagree in their assessment. Medical Education Manager Gurmeet “The MMI, in contrast, exposes each “Roy” Rai observed the MMI in operation applicant to 10 raters, yielding more at the University of Cincinnati College independent observations about each of Medicine, the commitment to move candidate,” Henderson said. “The raters forward for the 2010-11 admissions cycle focus on communication and problemwas finalized. The entire Office of Medical solving skills – unbiased by academic Education staff, particularly from the Office records.” of Admissions and the clinical skills suite, Henderson credits longtime admissions was instrumental in implementing MMI in committee member Francis Sousa for such a short time. his leadership in initiating the MMI for Rai said that because some elements the 2010-11 admissions cycle. A survey of the MMI process can make it seem of a wide range of School of Medicine impersonal, UC Davis has made some community members helped identify a set important modifications to tailor the MMI of values and qualities important in medical and the entire interview day experience to students and future physicians. Sousa, a create a more welcoming environment. clinical professor of ophthalmology and “A week in advance, we e-mail appliinternal medicine, helped select and modify cants detailed instructions explaining how the MMI scenarios to reflect the School of our MMI works,” Rai said, noting that one Medicine’s mission. of the 10 stations called “pathway to medi“The MMI is more fair and cine” is unstructured and gives applicants comprehensive than the traditional longthe opportunity to tell their story. Current interview model. We are only the second FROM PAGE 1 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev students organize and give tours of UC Davis facilities, and host applicants during lunch time. In addition, Henderson personally meets with applicants in groups of five for an hour in an informal session. “Dr. Henderson is committed to meeting all applicants throughout the admissions cycle each year, and I know of no other medical school dean of admissions who does that,” Rai added. Last spring, the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing developed and implemented its own rotational interview process that was inspired by the McMaster University model as well as innovative approaches in use at other nursing schools. Candidates for the nursing school’s Ph.D. program rotated through eight stations at which raters were unaware of applicants’ backgrounds, grades or qualifications. Deborah Ward, associate dean of the School of Nursing, said that the rotational approach is intended to give the admissions committee insights about each candidate’s career goals and aspirations rather than simply verifying academic qualifications. “The questions at each station address the applicants’ alignment with the School of Nursing’s core values: leadership development, interprofessional and interdisciplinary education, transformative research, cultural inclusiveness, and innovative technology, as well as teaching and interpersonal skills,” Ward explained. “We opted for this process because it gives the student candidate a better opportunity to be more engaged in the process than what is typically seen in a panel or single-person interview,” Ward observed. “It also provides opportunity for applicants to respond to a variety of questions and case situations, demonstrating many aspects of their knowledge and experiences.” The schools of nursing and medicine will conduct ongoing monitoring and analysis to gauge the outcomes of the rotational process. UC Davis Health System Faculty Development Office 2921 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400 Sacramento, CA 95817 Published by the Faculty Development Office DECEMBER 2010 – JANUARY 2011 Workshops and other activities You are invited! We encourage you to enroll in one of the various workshops, programs and events sponsored by the Faculty Development Office. For more event details and to register, visit www.ucdmc.ucdavis. edu/facultydev/ and click Enroll Online. (Event co-sponsors are indicated within parentheses.) Volunteer Clinical Faculty members are also welcome and encouraged to attend faculty development events. facultyNEWSLETTER December Published by the Faculty Development Office, which administers and coordinates programs that respond to the professional and career development needs of UC Davis Health System faculty members. 1 Application Deadline: Dean’s Excellence Awards 7 Breakfast With the Dean 2921 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400 Sacramento, CA 95817 (916) 703-9230 www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev/ 10 Scientific Writing for Publication (JCLP) January Edward Callahan, Ph.D. Associate Dean for Academic Personnel Medical and nursing school admissions officials have long grappled with a monumental task: selecting the best applicants from among thousands of academically qualified candidates who have the greatest promise to succeed and thrive. The task involves evaluation of far more than objective, quantifiable and easily measurable academic criteria. Predictors of performance also encompass many subjective, global characteristics, including communication skills, compassion, ethical decision making, collegiality, maturity, cultural sensitivity, empathy, critical thinking skills, powers of observation, and decisiveness under pressure. These and other essential characteristics may be difficult to discern during traditional one-on-one interviews in which an applicant responds to a predictable battery of questions during a session lasting 45 minutes to an hour. That’s one reason why UC Davis admissions officials took notice of a radically different approach in which candidates interpret and respond to a series of “real-life” situations. The method, known as the “multiple mini-interview” (MMI) process, was devised in 2002 by McMaster University of Ontario, Canada. The approach has since been adopted and studied by other schools in Canada, Australia, and the United States. Last spring, the UC Davis School of Medicine purchased a license to use a bank of scenarios that McMaster validated, and began implementing the MMI for the 2010-11 application cycle. CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 19 Faculty Forward Advisory Committee February Cheryl Busman Program Representative, Faculty Development cheryl.busman@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu 8 Workshop: Putting Together Your Academic Packet 11 Mental Models (JCLP) EditPros LLC Writing and Editing www.editpros.com 23 Workshop: Family-Friendly and Career Flexibility Policies Save the date: March 1 Dean’s Recognition Reception Event co-sponsor JCLP: Junior Career Leadership Program facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev MMI places UC Davis at vanguard of the admissions process 14 Time Management Skills (JCLP) Gregg Servis, M.Div. Director, Faculty Development gregg.servis@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu 5 ROTATIONAL MINI INTERVIEWS BEGUN 6 The School of Medicine’s MMI team members include (from left) Ed Dagang, admissions director; Joanna Garcia, MMI coordinator; Denise Nelson, interim MMI support; Lanina Sanders, admissions support; Francis Sousa, MMI training and development director; Gurmeet “Roy” Rai, chief administrative officer; and Mark Henderson (inset photo), associate dean fpr admissions. The team also includes Kendra Harris, director of clinical education; and Haydee Pineda-Johnson, standard patient administrator. (Photo by Emi Manning) MINI INTERVIEWS U.S. medical school to use the MMI for the entire incoming class. That puts UC Davis Vice Chancellor Claire Pomeroy described at the vanguard of the medical admissions the MMI concept in an article that appeared process,” Sousa said. on UC Davis Health System’s “Insider” (see “An applicant’s disappointing http://intranet.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/ucdhs/ performance in one MMI station doesn’t vcupdate/2010/09/9-20-10.shtml). carry the same weight as with the The UC Davis School of Medicine traditional interview. He or she has nine uses the MMI to interview 20 applicants other stations in which to do well,” Sousa every Friday in the Clinical Skills observed. “With the MMI method, key Center. Applicants rotate through a qualitative information about applicants “circuit” of 10 stations. Each station is is gathered in a systematic, structured a timed, eight-minute encounter, with manner.” a two-minute respite between. Unlike interviewers in traditional long-form sessions who have access to the academic records of interviewees, their MMI counterparts (called “raters”) are “blinded” from that information to diminish potential bias. Rather than assessing medical knowledge, the MMI discerns the ability of candidates to analyze problems, see multiple sides of an issue, work in a team, communicate and exhibit passion for medicine. Sousa and Henderson performed Mark Henderson, the UC Davis School much of the groundwork that led to the of Medicine’s associate dean for Admissions, School of Medicine’s implementation of the observed that under the traditional MMI. After an advance team composed of interview system, the two interviewers Sousa, Admissions Selection Subcommittee who meet with each candidate frequently Chair Theodore Wun and Office of disagree in their assessment. Medical Education Manager Gurmeet “The MMI, in contrast, exposes each “Roy” Rai observed the MMI in operation applicant to 10 raters, yielding more at the University of Cincinnati College independent observations about each of Medicine, the commitment to move candidate,” Henderson said. “The raters forward for the 2010-11 admissions cycle focus on communication and problemwas finalized. The entire Office of Medical solving skills – unbiased by academic Education staff, particularly from the Office records.” of Admissions and the clinical skills suite, Henderson credits longtime admissions was instrumental in implementing MMI in committee member Francis Sousa for such a short time. his leadership in initiating the MMI for Rai said that because some elements the 2010-11 admissions cycle. A survey of the MMI process can make it seem of a wide range of School of Medicine impersonal, UC Davis has made some community members helped identify a set important modifications to tailor the MMI of values and qualities important in medical and the entire interview day experience to students and future physicians. Sousa, a create a more welcoming environment. clinical professor of ophthalmology and “A week in advance, we e-mail appliinternal medicine, helped select and modify cants detailed instructions explaining how the MMI scenarios to reflect the School of our MMI works,” Rai said, noting that one Medicine’s mission. of the 10 stations called “pathway to medi“The MMI is more fair and cine” is unstructured and gives applicants comprehensive than the traditional longthe opportunity to tell their story. Current interview model. We are only the second FROM PAGE 1 facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev students organize and give tours of UC Davis facilities, and host applicants during lunch time. In addition, Henderson personally meets with applicants in groups of five for an hour in an informal session. “Dr. Henderson is committed to meeting all applicants throughout the admissions cycle each year, and I know of no other medical school dean of admissions who does that,” Rai added. Last spring, the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing developed and implemented its own rotational interview process that was inspired by the McMaster University model as well as innovative approaches in use at other nursing schools. Candidates for the nursing school’s Ph.D. program rotated through eight stations at which raters were unaware of applicants’ backgrounds, grades or qualifications. Deborah Ward, associate dean of the School of Nursing, said that the rotational approach is intended to give the admissions committee insights about each candidate’s career goals and aspirations rather than simply verifying academic qualifications. “The questions at each station address the applicants’ alignment with the School of Nursing’s core values: leadership development, interprofessional and interdisciplinary education, transformative research, cultural inclusiveness, and innovative technology, as well as teaching and interpersonal skills,” Ward explained. “We opted for this process because it gives the student candidate a better opportunity to be more engaged in the process than what is typically seen in a panel or single-person interview,” Ward observed. “It also provides opportunity for applicants to respond to a variety of questions and case situations, demonstrating many aspects of their knowledge and experiences.” The schools of nursing and medicine will conduct ongoing monitoring and analysis to gauge the outcomes of the rotational process. UC Davis Health System Faculty Development Office 2921 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400 Sacramento, CA 95817 Published by the Faculty Development Office DECEMBER 2010 – JANUARY 2011 Workshops and other activities You are invited! We encourage you to enroll in one of the various workshops, programs and events sponsored by the Faculty Development Office. For more event details and to register, visit www.ucdmc.ucdavis. edu/facultydev/ and click Enroll Online. (Event co-sponsors are indicated within parentheses.) Volunteer Clinical Faculty members are also welcome and encouraged to attend faculty development events. facultyNEWSLETTER December Published by the Faculty Development Office, which administers and coordinates programs that respond to the professional and career development needs of UC Davis Health System faculty members. 1 Application Deadline: Dean’s Excellence Awards 7 Breakfast With the Dean 2921 Stockton Blvd., Suite 1400 Sacramento, CA 95817 (916) 703-9230 www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev/ 10 Scientific Writing for Publication (JCLP) January Edward Callahan, Ph.D. Associate Dean for Academic Personnel Medical and nursing school admissions officials have long grappled with a monumental task: selecting the best applicants from among thousands of academically qualified candidates who have the greatest promise to succeed and thrive. The task involves evaluation of far more than objective, quantifiable and easily measurable academic criteria. Predictors of performance also encompass many subjective, global characteristics, including communication skills, compassion, ethical decision making, collegiality, maturity, cultural sensitivity, empathy, critical thinking skills, powers of observation, and decisiveness under pressure. These and other essential characteristics may be difficult to discern during traditional one-on-one interviews in which an applicant responds to a predictable battery of questions during a session lasting 45 minutes to an hour. That’s one reason why UC Davis admissions officials took notice of a radically different approach in which candidates interpret and respond to a series of “real-life” situations. The method, known as the “multiple mini-interview” (MMI) process, was devised in 2002 by McMaster University of Ontario, Canada. The approach has since been adopted and studied by other schools in Canada, Australia, and the United States. Last spring, the UC Davis School of Medicine purchased a license to use a bank of scenarios that McMaster validated, and began implementing the MMI for the 2010-11 application cycle. CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 19 Faculty Forward Advisory Committee February Cheryl Busman Program Representative, Faculty Development cheryl.busman@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu 8 Workshop: Putting Together Your Academic Packet 11 Mental Models (JCLP) EditPros LLC Writing and Editing www.editpros.com 23 Workshop: Family-Friendly and Career Flexibility Policies Save the date: March 1 Dean’s Recognition Reception Event co-sponsor JCLP: Junior Career Leadership Program facultyNEWSLETTER | December 2010 – January 2011 | www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/facultydev MMI places UC Davis at vanguard of the admissions process 14 Time Management Skills (JCLP) Gregg Servis, M.Div. Director, Faculty Development gregg.servis@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu 5 ROTATIONAL MINI INTERVIEWS BEGUN 6 The School of Medicine’s MMI team members include (from left) Ed Dagang, admissions director; Joanna Garcia, MMI coordinator; Denise Nelson, interim MMI support; Lanina Sanders, admissions support; Francis Sousa, MMI training and development director; Gurmeet “Roy” Rai, chief administrative officer; and Mark Henderson (inset photo), associate dean fpr admissions. The team also includes Kendra Harris, director of clinical education; and Haydee Pineda-Johnson, standard patient administrator. (Photo by Emi Manning)