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Session Design Submission Review

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Blueprint for Leadership: A practical workshop for Designing, Implementing, and Evaluating Resident Curricula

Session TypeWorkshop

Tasha Posid MA, PhD
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Blueprint for Leadership: A practical workshop for Designing, Implementing, and Evaluating Resident Curricula
Is this submission from an ASE Committee, Task Force, or Working Group?

Yes

Which Committee(s)/Task Force(s)/Working Group(s)?
  • Assessment, Curriculum, and Evaluation
Session Information

Session Description

Demand for structured leadership training for residents is undeniable, as evidenced by the development and recent expansion of national curricula like the ACS Residents as Teachers curriculum. However, standardized curricula often overlooks institutional context and resource variability and do not consistently deliver the longitudinal experience trainees need to develop durable leadership skills. This interactive workshop is designed to equip participants with basic tools useful for supplementing current leadership programming, creating a new training opportunity, or aiding in development of a customized leadership curriculum.

 

 This session is ideal for Program Directors, Associate Program Directors, clinician educators, chief residents, and any faculty, fellows, or residents interested in developing educational initiatives.

 

The session will focus on practical applications. We will begin with a brief introduction to common leadership curriculum models identified through our working group’s experience. These will span both large / resource-rich academic institutions to small / under-resourced small or community institutions, with input across GME educators, faculty, and residents for a holistic perspective.

 

This will be followed by a small-group interactive discussion in which participants identify institutional goals, constraints, and barriers to implementation. Using live polling and open discussion, attendees will categorize challenges such as limited faculty bandwidth, competing curricular demands, or lack of funding or protected time—setting the stage for targeted exploration during small-group rotations.

 

Participants will then rotate through expert-facilitated small-group-style stations, each designed to highlight a specific leadership education context or strategy. Through structured reflection and facilitated discussion, attendees will identify realistic implementation pathways tailored to their institutional resources and capacity. The goal is for workshop participants to analyze their own institutional environments and develop feasible, resource-aligned strategies for adapting or implementing leadership curricula. 

 

The four expert-led stations include: 

  • Station 1: Designing Curricula in Large / Resource-Rich Academic Institutions (GME / Faculty Perspective)
  • Station 2: High-Impact, Low-Resource Strategies for Community Hospitals or Small / Under-Resourced Programs (Faculty Perspective)
  • Station 3: The Resident-as-Teacher: Building a Resident-Led Program (Resident Perspective)
  • Station 4: Measuring Success: Developing Evaluation and Assessment Tools / Metrics

 

These will run concurrently in two 20-minute blocks so that participants can work through the two stations most relevant to their interests. 

 

The workshop will culminate in a large-group debrief and synthesis, where facilitators and participants will co-create a “recipe for success” that integrates lessons, examples, and pathways from all stations. This closing segment will help attendees translate ideas into practical, actionable plans suited to their home institutions.

Participants will leave with a customizable framework, short- and long-term implementation strategies, and a toolkit of adaptable resources for curriculum design and evaluation.

 

Workshop Length

90-minute workshop

If a similar workshop is submitted, would you be willing to combine workshops into one session?

Yes

Would you be open to presenting a workshop of a different duration than selected above if needed?

Yes

Course Objective 1

Identify institutional factors that influence the design and implementation of resident leadership curricula.

Course Objective 2

Assess local resources, faculty capacity, and program constraints to determine feasible strategies for leadership training.

Course Objective 3

Compare diverse leadership education models across academic and community-based training environments.

Session Objective 4

Develop a tailored framework for resident leadership training that aligns with institutional goals and available resources.

Session Objective 5

Formulate an implementation and evaluation plan to support sustainable leadership education within their home program.

Session Outline
Activity Order Title of Presentation or Activity Presenter/Faculty Name Presenter/Faculty Email Time allotted in minutes for activity

1

Welcome and Introduction to Workshop and Panelists

Tasha Posid

Tasha.Posid@osumc.edu

3

2

Overview: Framework for Leadership Curriculum Design: Example 1: Designing Curricula in Large / Resource-Rich Academic Institutions (GME Perspective)

Tasha Posid

Tasha.Posid@osumc.edu

5

3

Overview: Framework for Leadership Curriculum Design: Example 2: Designing Curricula in Large / Resource-Rich Academic Institutions (Faculty Perspective)

George Koch

George.Koch@osumc.edu

5

4

Overview: Framework for Leadership Curriculum Design: Example 3: High-Impact, Low-Resource Strategies for Community Hospitals or Small / Under- Resourced Programs (Faculty Perspective)

Osama Elsawy

elsawyo@sjhmc.org

5

5

Overview: Framework for Leadership Curriculum Design: Example 4: The Resident-as-Teacher: Building a Resident-Led Program (Resident Perspective)

Nicole Santucci

snicole@wustl.edu

5

5

Overview: Framework for Leadership Curriculum Design: Example 4: The Resident-as-Teacher: Building a Resident-Led Program (Resident Perspective)

Vivian Wong

Vivian.Wong@osumc.edu

0

6

Overview: Framework for Leadership Curriculum Design: Example 5: Measuring Success: Developing Evaluation and Assessment Tools / Metrics

Dandan Chen

dchen43@mgh.harvard.edu

5

7

Small-Group Interactive Discussion: Identifying Barriers, Constraints, and Institutional Goals or Resources (followed by large group debrief)

Minna Wieck

mmwieck@health.ucdavis.edu

15

7

Small-Group Interactive Discussion: Identifying Barriers, Constraints, and Institutional Goals or Resources (followed by large group debrief)

Baila Maqbool

bmaqbool@salud.unm.edu

0

7

Small-Group Interactive Discussion: Identifying Barriers, Constraints, and Institutional Goals or Resources (followed by large group debrief)

Theresa Wang

theresanwang@gmail.com

0

8

Station 1: Designing Curricula in Large / Resource-Rich Academic Institutions (GME / Faculty Perspective)

George Koch

George.Koch@osumc.edu

40

8

Station 1: Designing Curricula in Large / Resource-Rich Academic Institutions (GME / Faculty Perspective)

Minna Wieck

mmwieck@health.ucdavis.edu

0

8

Station 2: High-Impact, Low-Resource Strategies for Community Hospitals or Small / Under-Resourced Programs (Faculty Perspective)

Osama Elsawy

elsawyo@sjhmc.org

0

8

Station 2: High-Impact, Low-Resource Strategies for Community Hospitals or Small / Under-Resourced Programs (Faculty Perspective)

Jenny Guido

Jenny.guido@sanfordhealth.org

0

8

Station 3: The Resident-as-Teacher: Building a Resident-Led Program (Resident Perspective)

Vivian Wong

Vivian.Wong@osumc.edu

0

8

Station 3: The Resident-as-Teacher: Building a Resident-Led Program (Resident Perspective)

Nicole Santucci

snicole@wustl.edu

0

8

Station 4: Measuring Success: Developing Evaluation and Assessment Tools / Metrics

Dandan Chen

dchen43@mgh.harvard.edu

0

8

Station 4: Measuring Success: Developing Evaluation and Assessment Tools / Metrics

Tasha Posid

Tasha.Posid@osumc.edu

0

9

Large Group Debrief: Synthesizing Lessons and Building a Tailored Action Plan

Jenny Guido

Jenny.guido@sanfordhealth.org

10

9

Large Group Debrief: Synthesizing Lessons and Building a Tailored Action Plan

Baila Maqbool

bmaqbool@salud.unm.edu

0

10

Closing Remarks

Tasha Posid

Tasha.Posid@osumc.edu

2

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