FAQs on Workplace Based Assessment
Questions relating to the WPBA framework
Q. How does the College ensure the
curriculum is interpreted in similar ways across deaneries? For
example, ’Community orientation‘ rarely seems to be given the
meaning set out in the Learning and Teaching Guide.
A. The key to this is clear specification
of what is required. The 12 competency areas of WPBA are
derived from the core curriculum statement: Being a General
Practitioner. The competency areas within WPBA are defined in
terms of a scoping statement and a series of developmental
descriptors. These are laid out in the
eportfolio.
Uniformity of interpretation depends on a
shared understanding between trainers, educational supervisors and
trainees. This in turn is dependent on training and calibration
which will be provided by deaneries.
Q. Is experience in Out of Hours (OOH)
services required?
A. Yes. However, competence in OOH is not
assessed within the WPBA framework. The trainee will need to
demonstrate competence in OOH care as per the existing arrangements
within deaneries. The progress towards and achievement of
competence will be logged within the trainee’s eportfolio.
Q. What is the format of the six-monthly
staging reviews?
A. Approximately every six months,
the GP educational supervisor and trainee meet to review all the
evidence collected in the trainee’s portfolio up until that point.
The trainee will conduct a self-assessment, and his/her progress
against each of the twelve competency areas will be judged by the
educational supervisor. A learning plan will then be agreed.
All this information will be recorded in a standardised format in
the eportfolio. It is anticipated that such a review is
likely to take somewhere between 1 to 2 hours.
Q. Should appraisals be incorporated into
the review process in some way; do registrars need evidence of
competence in appraisals? Will the GMC lay down requirements for
trainee appraisal?
A. The staging reviews are educational
appraisals. The evidence collection and regular review process
should satisfy any modification of the NHS appraisal process.
Q. What would an educational supervisor do
if they had concerns with a GPStR at the 6 monthly review and the
Deanery Panel was not due to meet for another 6 months?
A. The educational supervisor would follow
the current Deanery arrangements relating to concerns. Clearly,
progress against the 12 WPBA competency areas will be noted, but if
the concerns are serious or need immediate attention, then contact
will need to be established with the Deanery.
Q. Where will adverse events and audits be
recorded? Is there guidance on how these should be approached?
A. Demonstration of competence in
competency area 10 explicitly requires the trainee to provide
evidence in the areas of SEA and audit. Although the need to write
a structured report as per existing summative assessment
requirements has been removed, the trainee will still need to
demonstrate competence in these areas by participating in an audit
and engaging in significant event processes. It will be up to the
educational supervisor to assess competence in these areas through
reviewing the evidence presented by the trainee at the regular
reviews.
Q. Does the RCGP have any role in quality
assurance of WPBA?
A. Yes it does. The RCGP will be
responsible for national quality monitoring of WPBA. At deanery
level, RCGP representation will be required in the deanery panels
that review all trainee portfolios.
Q. What is the College doing about finding
representatives for deanery panels?
A. The RCGP will be recruiting college
assessors against a person specification and training them
for the role.
Q. Who or what is the educational
supervisor – what skills are needed?
A. The RCGP believes that educational
supervision will be best provided from general practice over the
entire training period. The exact arrangements will need to be
defined by individual Deaneries.
It is anticipated that educational
supervision arrangements will be orchestrated by Deanery programme
directors. The actual supervisor for a given trainee may be a
programme director or a GP trainer. The aspiration is that the
educational supervisor is responsible for the entire training
envelope for a given trainee.
Q. How does WPBA fit in with the Gold
Guide?
A. The WPBA arrangements in relation to
educational supervision, and annual review of trainee progress are
set out in the Gold Guide to Specialty Training.
Q. What happens if a trainee fails a
placement?
A. Failure in this context is not an
appropriate term. Trainees may have significant developmental needs
identified during a placement. These will be delineated using the
specified RCGP assessment tools or recorded separately by the
clinical supervisor during an attachment using the clinical
supervisor’s report (CSR). This information will feed into the
relevant staging review, and at the direction of the educational
supervisor to the annual deanery process, where the panel will
decide if the trainee needs any additional training.
Serious issues of professional performance
or ill health during a placement will need to be handled by normal
acute trust/ PCT/ deanery mechanisms.
Questions relating to the evidence gathering
tools
1. CbD/COT
Q. Should trainers be planning to cover
most of the competence areas in each CbD, or just a couple per
case?
A. As many competencies that are relevant
to the case and allowable within the time-frame should be covered.
It is unrealistic to expect that all the CbD competencies will be
covered in a single case discussion. For this reason it is
recommended that the trainee has several CbD discussions during
their training to ensure sufficient sampling of all the
competencies. This is analogous to the current MRCGP video
assessment.
Q. Is there any guidance on the amount of
time a single CbD should take?
A. Yes the guidance notes on CbD state
approximately 30mins for each case discussion to include the
discussion itself, completing the rating form and giving the
trainee feedback.
Q. Should there be calibration of CbDs/COTs
at scheme or deanery level or is this not necessary?
A. This is not necessary, as these tools
simply serve to gather information which is reviewed at the staging
reviews. Although each CbD is pushing the trainer to make
judgements against the CbD competencies, the purpose of this is to
elicit information that feeds into the WPBA competency areas and
generates feedback to the trainee. There is no pass/fail for any
individual Cbd or COT or any of the other WPBA tools.
Q. How much leading should the trainer do
in their questions for CbDs?
A. The assessor is eliciting information
and therefore may use any questioning style that is
appropriate.
Q. Is it acceptable to use a case where
there has been a debrief or is that too easy?
A. No, such a discussion would not be a CbD
as set out in the CbD guidance.
Q. What sort of paperwork should the
registrar produce?
A. Just the actual written notes relating
to the case and consultation under discussion. Viewing this on the
computer or a computerised printout is fine.
Q. One or two CbDs at any one sitting –
does it matter?
A. No it depends upon the total time
allocated for that CbD discussion.
Q. How much evidence of CbDs should be
recorded and retained for QA purposes?
A. Just the completion of the rating form,
areas for feedback and action points arising.
Q. Is the recommended number of CbD/COTs a
minimum or an absolute?
A. It’s a minimum; more can be done if more
information is required. This is a decision for the trainee and
their clinical supervisor/trainer.
Q. Is it acceptable/desirable to involve
another trainer in some of the Cbd/COTs?
A. During an attachment, yes if feasible,
but this is not mandatory. During a training programme the trainee
will of necessity have different assessors drawn from the different
attachments he/she rotates through.
Q. What standard of competence should be
used in ST1 and ST2? Is it the standard for that stage in training
or the standard which the registrar should have reached at the end
of training?
A. It is the standard that a trainee should
have reached by the end of the training. This means that
trainees in ST1 and ST2 may well have developmental needs
identified by using these assessment tools. That is what the
assessment system is designed to do, so that further training
placements can be directed towards the developmental needs of the
trainee.
2. MSF
Q. Can the registrar ask the same people to
complete the second MSF or must they be quite different people? Is
this feasible in small practices?
A. Yes, most practices, even small ones,
could identify 5 clinical and non-clinical colleagues to complete
the questionnaire
Q. What happens if people do not respond to
the questionnaires?
A. Meaningful feedback is still possible if
not all raters complete the questionnaire, but the more that do,
the better.
Q. Should the registrar see all the
feedback, including the free text, bearing in mind that this might
be quite devastating, or should the registrar get only the trainers
interpretation?
A. The feedback will be sent to the
educational supervisor first to enable him/her to prepare feedback
based on the results, but the entire feedback will be available in
an un-edited form at the supervisor’s discretion.