Most challenges you will experience in the classroom are predictable. In this part we cover some of them. While some are generic, they may arise in relation to shock, so are relevant for this course.
If you are ever unsure about how to answer a learner’s question, don’t make it up on the spot. Instead, manage the situation as follows:
Please note that for privacy reasons you must not contact the learner directly, so make sure they know to email their PTS Centre.
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A common trainer challenge is over-teaching the topic by moving into diagnosis or clinical information that learners do not need to know about in order to provide effective first aid. It may be tempting for you to share knowledge you consider interesting, but your interest does not define the course content.
As extensively covered in this course: when it comes to shock, keep it simple. A useful test is to ask yourself whether a piece of information helps the learner:
If it does not support these two tasks, sharing it with your learner will likely do more harm to their effectiveness and confidence in providing first aid than good.
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Consider this classroom situation: A learner does not treat for shock during a scenario involving a deteriorating patient because there was no bleeding in the scenario.
The first step for you is to recognise that you may not have explained clearly that shock can be caused by a range of serious illnesses or injuries that include bleeding but also conditions like burns, infection, heart problems and severe allergic reactions.
Step two is to explain this to the learner and make sure they understand.
As a third step, reflect on whether the gap in knowledge only applied to the one learner or whether it may also apply to others. In general:
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Consider this classroom situation: A learner challenges your instruction to not raise the patient’s legs. They say they were taught this in a previous course and challenge your credibility.
In response, acknowledge that it used to be clinical advice to raise legs in first aid and that this was therefore taught in the past. Then explain that:
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Consider this classroom situation: During a scenario, a learner turns their back to the patient after having made them comfortable and talks to a bystander while waiting for the ambulance.
In response, remind the learner of the importance of reassurance in the management of shock. Explain to them that:
Are there other challenges you have experienced or are concerned about? Reach out to your Regional Training Coordinator or contact your Training Manager for support on how to prepare for them.
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