Lunch and Learn: Understanding Educational Supervision (PC22MAY26)

AvailabilityPlaces available  Add to basket
SubjectPC Multiprofessional Supervisors
DescriptionEducational Supervision in General Practice reflects a shared approach used across all health professions: supporting learning, ensuring competence, and promoting safe, reflective practice. Although each profession uses different frameworks or terminology, the core purpose remains the same—developing safe, skilled, and autonomous clinicians who can deliver high-quality patient care.
VenueVirtual (Microsoft Teams), - Virtual  View details
Date & timeFriday 22 May 2026, 12:00 to 12:30
LecturerSpeaker - TBC  View details
Target audience

This Lunch and Learn session is designed for supervisors in primary care who are part of the Community of Practice. It aims to provide valuable insights and encourage peer learning and collaboration.

Target audience: Primary care supervisors, including GPs, AHPs, and others in educational supervision roles.

Mandatory: Allied Health Professional, or Doctor

Course styleLecture
CateringNot applicable
CPD points0.000
CostNo charge
Aims

To develop an understanding of educational supervision in General Practice and how its principles apply across all health professions, enabling supervisors to support learners’ development, performance, and safe clinical practice.

Objectives
  • Describe the core principles and purpose of educational supervision in General Practice.
  • Apply supportive strategies—such as feedback, reflection, and personalised learning plans—to promote supervisee growth, capability, and wellbeing.
  • Understand how supervision ensures patient safety, professional standards, and effective progression towards independent practice across the wider health workforce.
Learning outcomes
  • Have a clear understanding of educational supervision in GP and its cross-professional relevance within healthcare training.
  • Be able to identify struggling or underperforming supervisees and initiate appropriate, supportive interventions.
  • Have a clear understanding of using constructive feedback, reflective discussion, and tailored development plans to support supervisee progress.
  • Be better equipped to contribute to safe, effective, and high-quality patient care through robust supervisory practice.