As a GP supervisor, you play a vital role in shaping the educational journey of medical students in Australia. Your guidance helps them develop essential clinical skills, professional attitudes, and an understanding of the fundamental place of general practice in the Australian healthcare system.
In a review paper from 2012, the GP supervisor was defined as ‘a general practitioner who establishes and maintains an educational alliance that supports the clinical, educational and personal development of a resident.’1 In practical terms, this definition means that supervision in general practice comprises three core, but intersecting, elements:
1.Wearne S, Dornan T, Teunissen PW, Skinner T. General practitioners as supervisors in postgraduate clinical education: an integrative review. Med Educ. 2012;46(12):1161-73.Â
Patient safety must underpin every aspect of supervision. Clinical supervision is the oversight role that the supervisor has over the safety of their patients. Supervisors must be able to answer the question ‘Is the student safe in there?’
Educational supervision parallels the clinical oversight role and involves the supervision of a student’s learning and progress. This comprises identification of learning needs, planning learning, teaching, assessment, and provision of feedback. GPSA has a wide range of resources which elaborate further on the educational supervision role.
Effective supervision is underpinned by a good relationship between the supervisor and medical student. It is therefore important for supervisors to have a good understanding of the student’s background and experience, and monitor their wellbeing.
The GP supervisor role includes the following tasks:
Actively developing and maintaining a ‘culture of learning’ in the practice provides the foundation for success in all aspects of supervision, as it:
GPSA has developed a framework that provides the tools, strategies, and supports to help transform a GP practice into a high quality clinical learning environment.
Ensuring a smooth start for the medical student takes planning and preparation before they commence at the practice. While most administrative requirements are likely to be managed by the practice manager, supervisors also need to be aware these tasks.
Orientation should be a whole-of-practice activity and involve all staff. Ideally it should involve a checklist and investment of adequate time. A practice manual is a useful resource. Other important aspects of orientation include discussion of professionalism, work health and safety, teaching and learning, and pastoral care. Orientation includes the following activities:
Preparation for the student’s commencement also includes orientation of the supervision team. For practices that have regular student placements, this may be as simple as briefly discussing the upcoming placement at a staff or clinical team meeting. For practices that are new to supervision or have irregular placements, supervision team orientation may need to be more comprehensive, including discussion of expectations, roles and responsibilities of various team members.
Monitoring and maintaining patient safety is the most fundamental aspect of the GP supervisor’s role. It is essential therefore that the supervisor implement a model of clinical oversight that reflects the student’s competence and ensures safe patient care.
Competence can be informed by a range of methods and tools, including:
Another important element of safety is cultural safety, in particular for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander staff and patients.
Facilitating teaching and learning is one of the most prominent tasks of the GP supervisor.  And one of the most challenging questions for the GP supervisor is ‘What should I teach my student?’.
 Students will have guidance on anticipated placement learning outcomes. But there are two overarching themes which we encourage supervisors on which to focus – these are 1. conducting a safe and effective consultation and 2. applying sound clinical reasoning skills. GPSA have collated and developed a wide range of resources on teaching and learning the core general practice skills of consultation skills and clinical reasoning.
Every medical student enters GP training with a unique background and experience, and therefore has a unique set of learning needs. While learning is ultimately the responsibility of the student, the GP supervisor has an important role to help their medical student identify, clarify, prioritise, and address learning needs. This included their ‘unknown unknown’ learning needs. There are a wide range of methods and tools that can be used for this purpose.
The other fundamental question is ‘How should I teach my student?’. There are a number of possible teaching methods that the GP supervisor can employ, including direct observation, discussing challenging cases, and topic teaching. Ideally, supervisors should use a diversity of methods to make the teaching experience engaging and rewarding for the student (and themselves!). GPSA have developed a teaching and learning toolbox, a repository of resources for use by supervisors and educators, to support their teaching. Key resources include the GPSA guide to Practice-based teaching and the GPSA teaching plans.
In comparison to ‘summative’ assessment (assessment of learning, for example exams), so-called ‘formative’ assessment is assessment for learning. Formative assessment is the low-stakes assessment of performance that supervisors undertake with students throughout the placement. Formative assessment can be both formal, for example by direct observation, or informal.
Perhaps more important than assessment per se is using the information gathered to give effective feedback. Feedback is at the heart of effective teaching and clinical supervision. It is an essential element of the supervision process to help develop a student’s knowledge and skills. Feedback is ideally not one-way but should be more of a two-way dialogue. Feedback can be formal, as part of structured performance reviews, or informal (‘on the run’).
To be effective, feedback needs to be:
Supporting wellbeing is a broad task, and includes that of the student, the supervision team and themself.
The GP supervisor has a key role as pastoral carer in both prevention and early intervention of stress-related issues in the student. Student wellbeing should be explicitly addressed in the first week of the placement and monitored throughout. Supervisors should enquire as to the support structures available to the student, particularly in the case of students who have relocated or are separated from family and friends.
The supervisor also has an important role to ensure the wellbeing and function of the broader supervision team. Effective self-care for all is critical to ensure effective teaching and learning, and patient safety.
Ongoing professional development is an important commitment for the GP supervisor. Both colleges highlight the importance of ongoing professional development in their standards. Professional development should include supervision topics, as well as topics in clinical and non-clinical aspects of practice.Â
Date reviewed: 24 February 2025