Background and objectives: Pressures on academic physician educators to generate clinical revenue or research grants may threaten faculty engagement as teachers. Neurology has historically prized its outstanding educators, but programs that provide financial support for teaching are lacking. We developed an opt-in, financial, teaching incentive program in an academic neurology department and evaluated its impact on faculty experience, motivation, and identity.
Methods: We applied a change management framework and conducted a National and local needs assessment before designing an education value unit (EVU) system using time-based metrics and rates reflecting impact on clinical revenue. Activities essential for graduation of students and residents that reduced clinical revenue generation were included. Faculty self-reported teaching through an online platform and received an incentive payment at the end of each year. Following a 6-month pilot, faculty participated in a 3-year implementation phase followed by an evaluation through faculty survey and semistructured interviews.
Results: In the first 3 years of the program, 42, 56, and 54 faculty enrolled, representing 28% of faculty by year 3. Faculty reported an average of 1,488 hours of teaching annually, drew from 13 divisions, and included all ranks (51% assistant, 29% associate, and 20% full). Fifty-five percent of participating faculty (N = 30) completed a survey to evaluate the incentive program. The majority agreed or somewhat agreed that the program had met its goals (80%-92%), reduced barriers to teaching (56%), and the department highly valued teaching (93%). Semistructured interviews with 11 participating faculty identified 5 themes regarding the impact of the program on faculty experience, including (1) supporting the choice of faculty to teach even when time is scarce, (2) making teaching visible to oneself and others, (3) directing faculty toward eligible teaching opportunities, (4) communicating the department's commitment to education, and (5) reinforcing educator identity and sense of belonging.
Discussion: The development of a teaching incentive program at an academic neurology center is feasible with benefits extending beyond the incentive payment itself. Although EVU programs are not without limitations, faculty experienced the program as reflective of the department valuing its educators, which reinforced their educator identity and engagement in teaching.
© 2024 American Academy of Neurology.