EHE students with a pharmacist preceptor Do you think your experience would be enriched with a senior pharmacy student? |
“Yes. SPEP students are usually eager to teach others, they are available consistently and are far more easy to relate to.” |
“Yes, because you get to see the perspective from a senior student, in terms of position/profession. Also some education sessions may be overwhelming and hence to get an SPEP student’s support to help understand the material would be good.” |
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EHE students with an SPEP or resident mentor Advantages of a student mentor “Relatability … can learn together … knows pharmacy curriculum and therefore, can tailor learning experience to appropriate level … provide suggestions/advice with respect to upper year pharmacy courses.” |
“Remembered school and therefore, has accurate assessment of our clinical knowledge.” |
“Student perspective was great, the mentor I had was very knowledgeable.” |
“Helpful, as was nice to help bridge our experience from school to practical experience.” |
“Makes EHE student feel comfortable in a new environment where they do not know everything … gave student a chance to ask questions and seek advice about the pharmacy program, career options in pharmacy and other aspects of the health care industry.” |
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Disadvantages of a student mentor “Cannot answer every single question.” |
“May not have as much clinical knowledge in therapeutic area as a practising pharmacist.” |
“They may not be completely confident about all of the duties of a pharmacist in the hospital setting because it is a new experience for them as well.” |
EHE = Early Hospital Experience, SPEP = Structured Practical Experiential Program.