Also teaching responsibilities go beyond supervision of residents and students. That part is required and not considered non-clinical time teaching. Non-clinical time teaching involves giving presentations or lectures to students, residents or even faculty about a specific topic. This can be done formally with didactitics (as practitioners at university-based hospital have faculty appointments at the university), bedside teaching to students or residents outside of your clinical time, stimulation training, development of education programs (in service training to nurses or doctors) and anything else you can think of that involves you teaching something to someone else. However, like I mentioned, it needs to be during non-clinical time and you need to show a record of you performing the education you provided and that it was peer reviewed (usually through feedback). Again, I'm not on a education track so someone can probably provide more insight, but it is what you make of it.
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