Student Placement
How to request a student placement with us.
Placements require a signed affiliation agreement which outlines the roles, responsibilities, and legal accountabilities between Fraser Health and the educational institution.
Quick reference guides for students, faculty, placing coordinators, destination coordinators, preceptors, and receiving coordinators.
Job shadows allow an individual to watch what happens in a profession. Job shadow participants do not engage in any work related activities at any time during their observation.
Student placement process
How to request a student placement with us.
Before student practice education can begin, educational institutions must have a signed affiliation agreement with Fraser Health Authority.
If you have more than 20 placement requests per year, learn about the required steps.
Educational institutions with HSPnet accounts
In general, the following steps are required
- Educational institution’s placing coordinator submits a request through HSPnet at least 8 weeks prior to placement start date.
- Fraser Health’s receiving coordinator reviews all request for suitability and confirms the affiliation agreement. If the request is appropriate, it will be forwarded to a Fraser Health destination coordinator.
- The destination coordinator reviews the request and either:
- Accepts the request and enters preceptor information. Educational institution is informed through HSPnet that the request has been accepted. It is the educational institution’s responsibility to populate the name of the instructor and student into HSPnet.
- Declines the request. A declined request is sent back to the educational institution and a new request can be submitted through HSPnet.
- The educational institution is responsible for preparing the student for clinical placement with orientation requirements (general and practice setting specific) prior to the start of the placement.
Figure 1: Placement process for educational institutions with HSPnet accounts
If you have less than 20 placement requests per year, learn about the required steps.
Education programs requesting fewer than 20 students per year often do not have an HSPnet user account.
The educational institution’s placing coordinator should contact the Student Practice team student.placement@fraserhealth.ca to obtain an HSPnet guest link in order to proceed with the HSPnet process outlined in Figure 2.
All of the student preparation for placement (documentation and orientation requirements) that applies to HSPnet account holders also apply to those with guest link access (Step #4 above).
Figure 2: Placement process for educational institutions and programs with fewer than 20 placements per year
Some educational institutions/programs use a placement method that sends open-ended requests to receiving sites to indicate that student placements are available.
The receiving sites may then respond with one or more “accepted” (available) offers for students. As outlined below, the preceptors name is then entered.
All of the student preparation for placement (documentation and orientation requirements) that apply to HSPnet account holders also apply to those using the Call for Offers process (Step #4 above).
Figure 3: Placement process for call for offers
Affiliation agreement
Placements require a signed affiliation agreement which outlines the roles, responsibilities, and legal accountabilities between Fraser Health and the educational institution.
As per policy, an affiliation agreement must be in place before submitting a request.
This process is currently under review. Contact student.placement@fraserhealth.ca if you have questions.
An affiliation agreement is a legal document. It establishes a contract between Fraser Health Authority and the educational institution. The contract defines the roles and responsibilities of the involved parties in providing student practice education and addresses the risks in the relationship for organizations and their employees, patients, clients, residents and students. For details, review our Affiliation Agreements policy.
A standard template is used across all health authorities in B.C. which includes the following:
- Definitions
- Insurance requirements
- Conditions of the agreement including start and end dates
- Responsibilities of the health authority and the educational institution
- Constraints
- Designating representatives and mechanisms to facility communication
- Reporting requirements for health and safety
- Provisions to protect privacy and confidentiality
- Mutual indemnification clauses which protect the health authority and the school against third party liability
Job shadow, career observations and supervised practice placements are not covered under affiliation agreements. Affiliation agreements are not required for paid internships, co-operative education programs, or research projects.
If an affiliation agreement is not in place between Fraser Health Authority and your educational institution, you may submit a request for your institution or program to be considered. Please contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca at least six months prior to your potential placement start date and include:
- A link to your educational institution website
- Health program outline and learning objectives
- Contact information of person with signing authority
If your program is approved, we will send out our provincially approved affiliation agreement forms. We do not sign educational institution agreements.
All students and faculty must have both third party liability insurance and accident insurance coverage prior to the start of all placements. Educational institutions with an affiliation agreement with Fraser Health Authority must arrange to insure all their students. If you are unsure about insurance coverage, please check with your educational institution’s placing coordinator.
See Placement Process.
Note: Having an affiliation agreement with Fraser Health Authority does not guarantee student practice placements. All placement requests are handled according to our placement process. Please do not contact Fraser Health employees or practice settings directly.
Student placement reference guides
Quick reference guides for students, faculty, placing coordinators, destination coordinators, preceptors, and receiving coordinators.
Select the quick reference guide you are looking for
Student placement reference guide for students.
How do I get student placement with Fraser Health?
Please direct all student placement inquiries to the student placement team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca. Do not contact the practice setting or a Fraser Health employee directly. All practice education placements must be coordinated by your educational institution’s placing coordinator (or designated course leader/faculty).
For all medical students seeking practice experiences in Fraser Health, visit College of Physicians and Surgeons of BC’s medical student webpage.
For volunteer experiences, visit our volunteers opportunities page.
Learn more about the placement process.
Before your placement
- Once your placement is confirmed, make sure you complete all the required orientation before you arrive. This includes applicable computer training.
- Confirm with your instructor about local practice setting orientation.
- Activate your Windows user account and email so you can access necessary policies and practice education guidelines. The practice education guidelines outline your student responsibilities.
- If you are a returning student, you will not receive a new Windows user account. Please store your account information in your files for subsequent placements. For assistance, go to Windows user account and email page.
- Check your Fraser Health email regularly for updates and news related to your placement.
- Dress code varies by practice setting and profession. Please refer to the Professional Image policy and local practice setting guidelines.
During your placement
- Make sure you have your educational institution student photo I.D. visible at all times.
- Introduce yourself as a student to patients, clients, residents, family members, staff and volunteers.
- Regularly communicate with your preceptor/field guide and/or faculty/instructor on how the experience is going, and invite feedback. Should an issue arise, refer to the Student Practice Issues guideline and our Respectful Workplace policy.
- Let your faculty/instructor and/or preceptor/field guide know if your assigned duties and responsibilities exceed your ability or scope of practice in your student role.
- Participate in educational institution evaluations.
- Follow the care standards for Fraser Health.
- Be familiar with our Patient Safety and Learning System (PSLS) for reporting errors. Talk to your instructor for training. Please notify your instructor and practice area leader (e.g., patient care coordinator, clinical nurse educator, supervisor) if there are any safety incidents, errors in treatment or medication or if there are any near misses for these types of events so that they may enter them into the PSLS system. This is a part of our continuous quality improvement.
- Contact your destination coordinator (typically a clinical nurse educator or practice leader) for any questions or concerns. He/she is your first point-of-contact.
After your placement
Provide feedback by completing an evaluation form from either your school where you completed your practice experience.
Questions or concerns?
Contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca.
Student placement reference guide for faculty and instructors at post-secondary institutions.
Faculty and instructors are employees of educational institutions who instruct and supervise students during the practice education experience.
All placements must be coordinated by the educational institution placing coordinator. Please direct all inquiries to the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca. Do not contact the practice setting or a Fraser Health employee directly.
Learn more about the placement process.
Practice Education Guidelines for B.C. are used to guide the roles and responsibilities of faculty, instructors, students and the health organization employees during the practice education experience. It is your responsibility to be familiar these guidelines (e.g., placement process, practice issues, negative behaviours in the workplace, etc.).
Prior to your placement
- Complete the required orientation for both faculty and students prior to placement.
- Schedule your local practice setting orientation listed in the HSPnet destination profile through the destination coordinator. See orientation page for local practice setting orientation checklist.
- Set up your LearningHub account to access online training modules.
- Activate your Windows user account and email. Please do this prior to arriving so you can access necessary policies and guidelines. Make sure you store your user account information for subsequent placements as you will not receive a new Windows user account.
- Check your Fraser Health email regularly for updates and news related to your placement
- Instructors can email LMCparking@fraserhealth.ca to arrange for student, faculty and instructor parking. See orientation page for details.
- Orientation programs for acute care, long term care and home health practice settings are available for faculty and instructors. Email student.placement@fraserhealth.ca to arrange.
- Ensure students have completed all the required orientation.
During your placement
- Facilitate local practice setting orientation for students (as applicable).
- Make sure you have your school faculty photo I.D. visible at all times.
- Dress code varies by practice setting and profession. Please refer to the Professional Image policy and local practice setting guidelines.
- If you require a room for debriefing, contact the destination coordinator at the location.
Questions or concerns?
Contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca.
Student placement reference guide for educational institution administrators.
What do I need to know about student practice in Fraser Health?
Learn more about the placement process.
Practice Education Guidelines for B.C. are used to direct the roles and responsibilities of faculty, instructors, students and the health organization employees during the practice education experience. It is your responsibility to be familiar with these guidelines (e.g., placement process, practice issues, orientation, immunizations, supervision by staff, adverse events, negative behaviours in the workplace, etc).
To support students in their learning, faculty and administrators must be aware of the following policies
- Student Practice Policy
- Documentation
- Hand Hygiene
- Confidentiality and Security of Personal Information
- Electronic Communications
- Professional Image
- Conflict of Interest
- Respectful Workplace
- Safe Handling of Patients, Residents, and clients
- Respiratory Protection
- Scented products
- Influenza Policy
- Research – Intellectual Property
- Patient and Family Gifts
- Media Relations
Review orientation requirements and arrange for unit/practice setting specific orientation.
What are the WorkSafeBC requirements?
As educational institutions are held to the same standards of worker protection legislation as Fraser Health, liability for instructor, faculty and student safety during practice experiences lie with the educational institution and WorkSafeBC standards must be met. This includes the appropriate screening of any privately contracted vendors who provide screening or testing of instructor, faculty or students to ensure that legislated guidelines are followed. While Fraser Health strives to maintain safe work and learning environments there is associated risk to students, faculty and instructors by virtue of being a health care organization.
Student exclusions
Educational institutions frequently inquire whether students may be excluded from various WorkSafeBC requirements to participate in practice experiences in Fraser Health. Some examples of these situations may be:
- Students unable to be fit-tested due to religious facial hair.
- Students unable to complete the required immunization schedules.
Fraser Health will work with the educational institution to support them in the decision making process for student practice experiences when situations outside of regular practice arise, however, the educational institution maintains the liability in protecting instructor/faculty and students while in Fraser Health practice settings. Roles and responsibilities are further outlined in the Practice Education Guidelines. For support in any unusual circumstances, please contact the Student Practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca with “Student exclusions for WorkSafe” in the subject line.
What about students with disabilities?
Fraser Health will work with the educational institution to support students with disabilities in achieving practice experiences. The burden of additional costs for additional supports, equipment or interpreters will be carried by the educational institution or the student. Please contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca with “Student disability support need” in the subject line.
Private Training Act legislation (PTA)
Private Training Act (PTA) governs all private post-secondary training in B.C. with greater than 40 curricular hours and greater than $4,000 tuition fees. PTA legislation came into effect on September 1, 2017. Changes in the regulatory structure allow this agency to have statutory decision making powers to decide which educational institutions can be opened. Visit the Private Training Institutions Branch website for requirements.
Questions or concerns?
Contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca.
Student placement reference guide for placing coordinators at post-secondary institutions.
A placing coordinator (also known as practice placement coordinators) is an employee at the educational institution who is responsible for coordinating, planning and communicating student placements.
Be familiar with the roles and responsibilities
There are three named roles for facilitating student practice education: placing coordinator (educational institution), receiving coordinator (clinical education coordinator), and destination coordinator (site/location specific designate for a given practice area).
The placing coordinator is responsible to:
- Ensure an affiliation agreement (and listed program) exists with Fraser Health.
- Establish and maintains educational institution programs, courses, and data in HSPnet.
- Submit and monitors student practice education experience via HSPnet including the review of any conditions applied to placement requests occur in a timely manner. Submits one request for each student practice experience.
- Include required student and instructor information for each request (i.e., start and end date, type of experience [group, non-group, and observation], legal student name, and student educational institution email, faculty name, etc.). Additional information may also be included such as student resumes, course handouts, field guides, evaluation forms, and so forth.
- Submit students’ educational institution email addresses to HSPnet at least eight weeks prior to placement start date. This is required to set-up user access to Fraser Health computers.
- Confirm accepted placements, releases student names, and cancels unused requests on HSPnet a minimum of six weeks prior to start date.
- Act as the point of contact to communicate with receiving destination/agency.
- Distribute health authority communication to educational institution stakeholders.
- Ensure orientation requirements for student and faculty are met.
Reviewing student placement requests in HSPnet
- Make sure an affiliation agreement is in place with the school before accepting a request.
- Review destination profiles for local practice setting descriptions, placement capacity and any specific requirements or orientation (e.g., resume, courses or typing speed requirement) as they may change. Contact the practice area for clarification or additional information if required (direct e-mail addresses provided in HSPnet).
- Educational institutions are never permitted to enter acceptance of a request on behalf of Fraser Health in HSPnet. Acceptance in HSPnet is logged and provides confirmation that Fraser Health has reviewed the request as entered in HSPnet. This is the legal agreement that goes with the affiliation agreement.
- Submit student placement requests in HSPnet a minimum of eight weeks prior to the placement start date. To avoid placement delays ensure the following pertinent details are included:
- Student’s correct information including their first and last name as well as the education issued email address.
- Instructor’s first and last name, contact information including their education email address.
- Type of placement (e.g., preceptorship/fieldwork, group, observation, split). Split request when the student will spend time in more than one destination.
- Actual start and end date of placement; include shift schedule and duration of hours.
- Select site, service, destination and discipline using the HSPnet glossary of terms for accuracy.
- Include a reasonable reply by date (greater than 2 weeks)
- Review placement requests regularly for conditions that may be placed on the request.
- Conditions usually indicate pertinent information is missing or the request does not accurately reflect the placement; these requests are not redirected to our destination coordinators until the condition is met. Note: If the condition is met, you will need to clear the checkbox which will signal our receiving coordinators to review the request again.
- Enter data and notes into HSPnet as needed.
Preparing students and faculty for the placement
- Review policies
- Student Practice Policy
- Documentation
- Hand Hygiene
- Confidentiality and Security of Personal Information
- Electronic Communications
- Professional Image
- Conflict of Interest
- Respectful Workplace
- Safe Handling of Patients, Residents, and clients
- Respiratory Protection
- Scented products
- Influenza Policy
- Research – Intellectual Property
- Patient and Family Gifts
- Media Relations
- Review orientation requirements and arrange for unit/practice setting specific orientation.
- Review the British Columbia Student Practice Education Guidelines.
Creating a supportive learning environment
It is important to foster a learning environment in which students feel safe, relaxed, and willing to take risks. Here are some ways to create a supportive learning environment for your students:
Building a strong community in the workplace
The practice setting can play an important role in helping students build knowledge, apply skills, develop caring attitudes, be socialized into the profession, and create contacts for future employment.
- Start out by working together to provide care and orient the student to the practice setting.
- Make them feel welcomed and a part of the team. Help students get acquainted with all members of the health care team.
- Provide students with opportunities to share about their backgrounds and cultures.
- Seek to connect students with a variety of learning opportunities to foster their preparation to move from the student to professional role. Provide a range of experiences provided, relevant to the students skills and level of learning.
Build self-esteem and self-efficacy
Students’ determination and belief that they can achieve their goals are important factors in their persistence in ongoing learning and transition to the professional role.
- Ensure that students experience success on their first day of the practicum so the first experience is a positive one. Ensure the students are respected and feel they are valued and part of the team.
- Be patient. Patience is an extremely important characteristic for any preceptor/mentor. Individuals can often take a longer time in the learning process because of various learning styles, but this does not mean they aren’t motivated to learn.
- Accept your student as he/she is and respect his/her values even if they differ from yours.
- Believe in your student and he/she will begin to believe in him/herself.
- Know your student’s name and use it frequently. Introduce them to patients and members of the health care team.
- Provide ongoing feedback to identify strengths as well as areas for improvement or shortcomings.
- Support students to identify their learning needs and experiences that are appropriate to their level of learning.
- To meet defined learning needs, use a range of learning experiences, involving patients, clients, health care providers and members of the inter-professional team,.
- Identify aspects of the learning environment which could be enhanced, negotiating with others to make appropriate changes.
- Act as a resource to facilitate the personal and professional development of others.
Use positive non-verbal communication
Non-verbal messages are an essential component of communication in the learning process. It is not only what you say to your student that is important but also how you say it. An awareness of non-verbal behaviour will allow you to become a better receiver of students’ messages and a better sender of signals that reinforce learning.
Some areas of non-verbal behaviours to explore include:
- Eye contact: Those who make eye contact open the flow of communication and convey interest, concern, warmth and credibility.
- Facial expressions: Smiling is a great way to communicate friendliness and warmth to students.
- Gestures: A lively and animated teaching style captures students’ attention, makes the material more interesting, and facilitates learning. Head nods also communicate positive reinforcement to students and indicate that you are listening.
- Posture and body orientation: Standing erect, but not rigid, and leaning slightly forward communicates to students that you are approachable, receptive and friendly. Speaking with your back turned or looking at the floor or ceiling should be avoided, as it communicates disinterest.
- Proximity: Cultural norms dictate a comfortable distance for interaction with students. Look for signals of discomfort caused by invading students’ space, which include rocking, leg swinging, crossed arms, tapping and gaze aversion.
- Paralinguistics: Tone, pitch, rhythm, timbre, loudness and inflection in the way you speak should be varied for maximum effectiveness. Students report that they learn less and lose interest more quickly when listening to teachers who have not learned to modulate their voices.
- Humour: Develop the ability to laugh at yourself and encourage students to do the same. Humour is often overlooked as a teaching tool. It can release stress and tension for both health care provider and student and foster a friendly classroom environment that facilitates learning.
Motivate students
Motivation is a key factor in student success.
- Involve students as active participants in learning. Students learn by doing, making, planning, creating and solving. Pose questions. Don’t tell students something when you can ask them.
- Be enthusiastic about what you are teaching. An individual’s enthusiasm is a crucial factor in student motivation. If you become bored or apathetic, students will too.
- Work from students’ strengths and interests.
- When possible, let students have some say in choosing component of their assignment during the placement.
- Vary your teaching methods (e.g., debates, brainstorming, discussion, demonstrations, case studies, online courses). Variety reawakens students’ involvement and motivation.
- Relate new tasks to those students already know.
Questions or concerns?
Contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca.
For assistance with HSPnet and troubleshooting, contact HSPnet Support directly at support@hspcanada.net.
Student placement reference guide for destination coordinators.
A destination coordinator is a health authority employee designated to coordinate student placements for a unit/location, department or specified discipline on HSPnet.
Getting started
Step 1. Set-up your Health Science Placement Network (HSPnet) profile with the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca.
Step 2. Complete HSPnet Mandatory New User Orientation online training. Student placement team will provide additional information to complete.
Step 3. Connect with Student Practice for further education details.
Step 4. Review student-related policies
Be familiar with the roles and responsibilities
There are three named roles for facilitating student practice education: placing coordinator (educational institution), receiving coordinator (clinical education coordinator), and destination coordinator (site/location specific designate for a given department/practice area).
The destination coordinator (or designate) is responsible to:
- Complete HSPnet Mandatory New User Orientation and the Orientation to the HSPnet Destination Coordinator Role.
- Ensure that there is an affiliation agreement (and listed program) in place prior to considering any student request.
- Provide destination profile and capacity updates for HSPnet assigned practice areas a minimum of three times per year to the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca who changes the profile.
- Accept or decline student practice education requests within 14 days of submission in HSPnet.
- Inform receiving coordinators and backup destination coordinator of any absences greater than 14 days.
- Enter name and contact information of health authority staff that will support a 1:1 student practice experience (e.g., preceptor, 1:1 or field guide) in HSPnet for the educational institution at least two weeks prior to the start date.
- Consider all requests for student practice education using the decision making process in 1.1 HSPnet Placement Process guideline.
- Support educational institution instructors and faculty in specific orientation to the practice setting.
- Inform Professional Practice of unresolved student practice issues or educational institution concerns.
- Inquire with educational institution faculty and instructor regarding completion of orientation pre-requisites.
- Ensure that students, faculty and instructors have access to all safety equipment (i.e., panic alarms and respirator mask types).
Reviewing student placement requests in HSPnet
- Make sure an affiliation agreement is in place with the school before accepting a request.
- Contact the school for clarification or additional information if required (direct e-mail links provided in HSPnet).
- Assess the overall unit/location/program capacity for students.
- Respond in a timely manner to student placement requests (accept or decline) by the reply by dates provided.
- Placing agencies cannot seek alternate placements until you respond on HSPnet to their original request.
- Never permit an educational institution to enter acceptance of a request on your behalf in HSPnet. Your acceptance in HSPnet is logged and provides confirmation you have reviewed the request as entered in HSPnet. This is the legal agreement that goes with the affiliation agreement.
- For non-group requests, identify available, qualified staff to mentor student.
- Enter staff preceptor name and Fraser Health contact information into HSPnet database (if not already there). Save name to specific placement request so students can connect with their preceptor to discuss their schedule.
- Encourage mentors to take Level 1 Foundational Mentorship and Level 1 Advanced Mentorship workshops.
- Optional: upload preceptor schedule into HSPnet.
- Enter data and notes into HSPnet as needed.
Preparing students and faculty for the placement
- Review policies
- Student Practice Policy
- Documentation
- Hand Hygiene
- Confidentiality and Security of Personal Information
- Electronic Communications
- Professional Image
- Conflict of Interest
- Respectful Workplace
- Safe Handling of Patients, Residents, and clients
- Respiratory Protection
- Scented products
- Influenza Policy
- Research – Intellectual Property
- Patient and Family Gifts
- Media Relations
- Review orientation requirements and arrange for unit/practice setting specific orientation
- Review the British Columbia Student Practice Education Guidelines
- Set-up Windows user and email accounts. Destination coordinators will receive an email for each student in each placement accepted. See sample email. Unit-based preceptor or educators will provide access to local shared network drive.
Providing ongoing support
- Be the point of contact for all placement requests at your location for your assigned disciplines (e.g., arrange faculty orientation, answer questions regarding the work area, clarify concerns, discuss student concerns, or discuss staff issues with students). Refer to our Student Practice Issues guideline should an issue arise.
- Review destination profile every four months and notify student.placement@fraserhealth.ca of any significant changes in the practice area and the student placement team will update the destination profile for you.
- Identify and e-mail the name of your back up or alternative destination coordinator for extended absences (greater than 2 weeks), or if you are leaving your position please notify the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca. HSPnet user IDs may not be shared. A new account for your back up/replacement will be created in a timely manner.
Creating supportive learning environments
It is important to foster a learning environment in which students feel safe, relaxed, and willing to take risks. Here are some ways to create a supportive learning environment for your students:
Build a strong community in the workplace
The practice setting can play an important role in helping students build knowledge, apply skills, develop caring attitudes, be socialized into the profession, and create contacts for future employment.
- Start out by working together to provide care and orient the student to the practice setting.
- Make them feel welcomed and a part of the team. Help students get acquainted with all members of the health care team.
- Provide students with opportunities to share about their backgrounds and cultures.
- Seek to connect students with a variety of learning opportunities to foster their preparation to move from the student to professional role. Provide a range of experiences provided, relevant to the students skills and level of learning.
Build self-esteem and self-efficacy
Students’ determination and belief that they can achieve their goals are important factors in their persistence in ongoing learning and transition to the professional role.
- Ensure that students experience success on their first day of the practicum so the first experience is a positive one. Ensure the students are respected and feel they are valued and part of the team.
- Be patient. Patience is an extremely important characteristic for any preceptor/mentor. Individuals can often take a longer time in the learning process because of various learning styles, but this does not mean they aren’t motivated to learn.
- Accept your student as he/she is and respect his/her values even if they differ from yours.
- Believe in your student and he/she will begin to believe in him/herself.
- Know your student’s name and use it frequently. Introduce them to patients and members of the health care team.
- Provide ongoing feedback to identify strengths as well as areas for improvement or shortcomings.
- Support students to identify their learning needs and experiences that are appropriate to their level of learning.
- To meet defined learning needs, use a range of learning experiences, involving patients, clients, health care providers and members of the inter-professional team,.
- Identify aspects of the learning environment which could be enhanced, negotiating with others to make appropriate changes.
- Act as a resource to facilitate the personal and professional development of others.
Use positive non-verbal communication
Non-verbal messages are an essential component of communication in the learning process. It is not only what you say to your student that is important but also how you say it. An awareness of non-verbal behaviour will allow you to become a better receiver of students’ messages and a better sender of signals that reinforce learning.
Some areas of non-verbal behaviours to explore include:
- Eye contact: Those who make eye contact open the flow of communication and convey interest, concern, warmth and credibility.
- Facial expressions: Smiling is a great way to communicate friendliness and warmth to students.
- Gestures: A lively and animated teaching style captures students’ attention, makes the material more interesting, and facilitates learning. Head nods also communicate positive reinforcement to students and indicate that you are listening.
- Posture and body orientation: Standing erect, but not rigid, and leaning slightly forward communicates to students that you are approachable, receptive and friendly. Speaking with your back turned or looking at the floor or ceiling should be avoided, as it communicates disinterest.
- Proximity: Cultural norms dictate a comfortable distance for interaction with students. Look for signals of discomfort caused by invading students’ space, which include rocking, leg swinging, crossed arms, tapping and gaze aversion.
- Paralinguistics: Tone, pitch, rhythm, timbre, loudness and inflection in the way you speak should be varied for maximum effectiveness. Students report that they learn less and lose interest more quickly when listening to teachers who have not learned to modulate their voices.
- Humour: Develop the ability to laugh at yourself and encourage students to do the same. Humour is often overlooked as a teaching tool. It can release stress and tension for both health care provider and student and foster a friendly classroom environment that facilitates learning.
Motivate students
Motivation is a key factor in student success.
- Involve students as active participants in learning. Students learn by doing, making, planning, creating and solving. Pose questions. Don’t tell students something when you can ask them.
- Be enthusiastic about what you are teaching. An individual’s enthusiasm is a crucial factor in student motivation. If you become bored or apathetic, students will too.
- Work from students’ strengths and interests.
- When possible, let students have some say in choosing component of their assignment during the placement.
- Vary your teaching methods (e.g., debates, brainstorming, discussion, demonstrations, case studies, online courses). Variety reawakens students’ involvement and motivation.
- Relate new tasks to those students already know.
Questions or concerns?
Contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca.
For assistance with HSPnet and troubleshooting, contact HSPnet Support directly at support@hspcanada.net.
Student placement reference guide for receiving coordinators at Fraser Health.
A receiving coordinator is a Fraser Health employee in the Professional Practice department who:
- provides local administration of HSPnet
- receives incoming requests directly from the educational institution
- redirects requests to the destinations specified
- provides troubleshooting and support to HSPnet users
Be familiar with the roles and responsibilities
There are three named roles for facilitating student practice education: placing coordinator (educational institution), receiving coordinator (Clinical Education Coordinator), and destination coordinator (site/location specific designate for a given department/practice area).
The receiving coordinator is responsible to:
- Ensure an affiliation agreement exists with educational institution (and listed program) prior to redirecting requests.
- Redirect HSPnet requests that match the destination profile within two business days.
- Attach a condition to requests that do not match existing destination profiles or when the request is not entered correctly in HSPnet.
- Initiate process to issue guest link account for HSPnet access for educational institutions/programs.
- Maintain the HSPnet database, which includes destination coordinator, preceptor and manager user access, and destination profiles.
- Send regular communications to destination coordinators to update profiles and capacities at least twice a year.
- Provide destination coordinators with student placement process orientation and ongoing mentorship for student placements.
- Maintain signed confidentiality acknowledgements from students and educational institution educators.
Facilitate student access to Fraser Health information technology and electronic documentation.
Reviewing student placement requests in HSPnet
- Make sure an affiliation agreement is in place with the school before accepting a request.
- Issue HSPnet guest links to non-HSPnet account holders when necessary.
- Review all student placement requests for Fraser Health Authority for appropriateness
- Place conditions on placement requests for further clarification or additional information if required.
- Assess the overall unit/location/program capacity for students.
- Forward student placement requests to destination coordinators in a timely manner.
- Enter data and notes into HSPnet as needed.
Preparing students and faculty for placement
- Advise students, faculty and employees about policies related to student practice (must be logged onto the Fraser Health network).
- Advise students, faculty and employees about orientation requirements.
- Advise students, faculty and employees about the British Columbia Student Practice Education Guidelines.
- Supports the set-up of Windows user and email accounts and other IT program user accounts and education. Unit-based preceptor or educators will provide access to local shared network drives.
Providing ongoing support
- Act as the point of contact for all placement requests in Fraser Health. Refer to the Student Practice Issues guidelines should an issue arise.
- Update destination profiles when notified of changes and with each contact with destination coordinators.
- Notify education institutions of any significant changes in the placement area destination profiles.
Student placement reference guide for health authority preceptors and field guides.
The following resources may assist you to support student development with exceptional clinical practice experiences. The educational institution for which you are acting as a preceptor/field guide is responsible to outline your roles and responsibilities regarding student supervision and evaluation.
Mentorship courses
- To prepare yourself for the mentor role, complete the Level 1 Foundational Mentorship and Level 1 Advanced Mentorship courses. Course registration details available on FH Pulse. Professional Practice can provide reimbursement to you manager for the Foundational Mentorship course.
- Use the competency assessment tool to identify your proficiency as a mentor or preceptor.
- Additional free resources include:
- E-tips for practice education online module
- The University of Western Ontario: Preceptor Education Program (PEP), includes seven modules for preceptors.
- Canadian Nurses Association: Achieving excellence in professional practice: A guide to preceptorship and mentorship
- Vancouver Coastal Health: Supporting learning in practice: Preceptors, clinicians and field supervisors. Includes reminders, practical tips and ideas to help make the preceptorship experience a positive one for both preceptor and preceptee.
Orientation
- Review orientation requirements for students.
- Provide the student with specific orientation information for your practice setting and profession
- Ensure that your employee required courses are up to date (e.g., code red, WHMIS, Fit Testing etc.)
Policies, guidelines and support tools
The British Columbia Practice Education Guidelines are used to guide the roles and responsibilities of faculty/instructors, students and the health organization employees during the practice education experience. It is your responsibility to be familiar these guidelines (e.g., placement process, practice issues, supervision, negative behaviours in the workplace, etc).
Specific student-related policies include:
While hosting students, those supporting students need to abide by the following policies
- Student Practice Policy
- Documentation
- Hand Hygiene
- Confidentiality and Security of Personal Information
- Electronic Communications
- Professional Image
- Conflict of Interest
- Respectful Workplace
- Safe Handling of Patients, Residents, and clients
- Respiratory Protection
- Scented products
- Influenza Policy
- Research – Intellectual Property
- Patient and Family Gifts
- Media Relations
What needs to occur prior to placement?
- Both faculty and students must complete the required orientation.
- A practice setting orientation is scheduled through the destination coordinator. HSPnet destination profiles should list orientation specific to the practice setting.
- Students and faculty are required to activate Windows user account and email.
- Orientation programs for acute care, long term care and home health practice settings are available for faculty and instructors.
What needs to occur during a placement?
- Students and faculty must keep school photo I.D. visible at all times.
- Follow dress code as per the Professional Image policy and local practice setting guidelines.
- Adhere to all policies and care standards.
Creating supportive learning environment
It is important to foster a learning environment in which students feel safe, relaxed, and willing to take risks. Here are some ways to create a supportive learning environment for your students:
Build a strong community in the workplace
The practice setting can play an important role in helping students build knowledge, apply skills, develop caring attitudes, be socialized into the profession, and create contacts for future employment.
- Start out by working together to provide care and orient the student to the practice setting.
- Make them feel welcomed and a part of the team. Help students get acquainted with all members of the health care team.
- Provide students with opportunities to share about their backgrounds and cultures.
- Seek to connect students with a variety of learning opportunities to foster their preparation to move from the student to professional role. Provide a range of experiences provided, relevant to the students skills and level of learning.
Build self-esteem and self-efficacy
Students’ determination and belief that they can achieve their goals are important factors in their persistence in ongoing learning and transition to the professional role.
- Ensure that students experience success on their first day of the practicum so the first experience is a positive one. Ensure the students are respected and feel they are valued and part of the team.
- Be patient. Patience is an extremely important characteristic for any preceptor/mentor. Individuals can often take a longer time in the learning process because of various learning styles, but this does not mean they aren’t motivated to learn.
- Accept your student as he/she is and respect his/her values even if they differ from yours.
- Believe in your student and he/she will begin to believe in him/herself.
- Know your student’s name and use it frequently. Introduce them to patients and members of the health care team.
- Provide ongoing feedback to identify strengths as well as areas for improvement or shortcomings.
- Support students to identify their learning needs and experiences that are appropriate to their level of learning.
- To meet defined learning needs, use a range of learning experiences, involving patients, clients, health care providers and members of the inter-professional team,.
- Identify aspects of the learning environment which could be enhanced, negotiating with others to make appropriate changes.
- Act as a resource to facilitate the personal and professional development of others.
Use positive non-verbal communication
Non-verbal messages are an essential component of communication in the learning process. It is not only what you say to your student that is important but also how you say it. An awareness of non-verbal behaviour will allow you to become a better receiver of students’ messages and a better sender of signals that reinforce learning.
Some areas of non-verbal behaviours to explore include:
- Eye contact: Those who make eye contact open the flow of communication and convey interest, concern, warmth and credibility.
- Facial expressions: Smiling is a great way to communicate friendliness and warmth to students.
- Gestures: A lively and animated teaching style captures students’ attention, makes the material more interesting, and facilitates learning. Head nods also communicate positive reinforcement to students and indicate that you are listening.
- Posture and body orientation: Standing erect, but not rigid, and leaning slightly forward communicates to students that you are approachable, receptive and friendly. Speaking with your back turned or looking at the floor or ceiling should be avoided, as it communicates disinterest.
- Proximity: Cultural norms dictate a comfortable distance for interaction with students. Look for signals of discomfort caused by invading students’ space, which include rocking, leg swinging, crossed arms, tapping and gaze aversion.
- Paralinguistics: Tone, pitch, rhythm, timbre, loudness and inflection in the way you speak should be varied for maximum effectiveness. Students report that they learn less and lose interest more quickly when listening to teachers who have not learned to modulate their voices.
- Humour: Develop the ability to laugh at yourself and encourage students to do the same. Humour is often overlooked as a teaching tool. It can release stress and tension for both health care provider and student and foster a friendly classroom environment that facilitates learning.
Motivate students
Motivation is a key factor in student success.
- Involve students as active participants in learning. Students learn by doing, making, planning, creating and solving. Pose questions. Don’t tell students something when you can ask them.
- Be enthusiastic about what you are teaching. An individual’s enthusiasm is a crucial factor in student motivation. If you become bored or apathetic, students will too.
- Work from students’ strengths and interests.
- When possible, let students have some say in choosing component of their assignment during the placement.
- Vary your teaching methods (e.g., debates, brainstorming, discussion, demonstrations, case studies, online courses). Variety reawakens students’ involvement and motivation.
- Relate new tasks to those students already know.
Questions or concerns?
Contact the student practice team at student.placement@fraserhealth.ca.
Visit Pulse for info on student practice education for leaders and current employees looking for placement.
Job shadow
Thank you for your interest in having a job shadow in Fraser Health.
Job shadows allow an individual to watch what happens in a profession. Job shadow participants do not engage in any work related activities at any time during their observation.
To apply for a job shadow, you need to go through a process where you fill out an application. The screening of job shadow applications is more thorough for areas that are considered sensitive, like counseling or social work.
If you meet the requirements, we will consider your request for a job shadow experience. However, granting job shadows depends on the specific site’s capacity and needs. Just submitting an application doesn’t mean you will automatically get a job shadow opportunity.
Because we receive a lot of requests, we only allow one job shadow per person per year.
*We will assess job shadow applications according to our Job shadow policy. Our Student Practice and New Initiatives team will carefully review the applications and make decisions based on the policy’s guidelines.
Kids 14 years of age or younger can connect with their high school and ask about the grade nine Take our Kid to Work Day (TOKTWD). This happens every year in November.
- Review the Fraser Health Job Shadow Policy.
- Gather supportive documentation prior to submitting application.
- Employees of Fraser Health will need to provide:
- Applicants who do not currently work for Fraser Health will need to provide:
- Criminal Record Check
- Release of Liability and Confidentiality Agreement for Job Shadows
- Proof of COVID-19 vaccination
- Proof of current immunization status (including influenza during flu season)
- Hand Hygiene certificate completed within the last year
- Apply using the Fraser Health job shadow application.
Please make sure you have the necessary documentation ready for upload when submitting the application. If you do not have all the documentation, your application will not be reviewed or processed.
Once submitted, your application will be reviewed and we will respond back to you within four to six weeks.
Frequently asked questions
Fraser Health does not arrange for job shadows with physicians.
If you are a student studying a health profession regulated by the Health Professions Act or Emergency Services Act, you may be allowed to shadow physicians and surgeons as part of your schooling.
For everyone else who is not a medical student, health professional student or medical school graduate, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia does not support job shadowing or observing. This is because it raises concerns about patient privacy and confidentiality. They believe that only enrolled students and graduates observing as part of their schooling should be allowed to do so, even with patient consent.
Yes, you are invited to complete the Job shadow application. When filling out the application, you will need to upload certain supporting documents. Please make sure you have the necessary documentation ready for upload when submitting the application.
Supportive documentation required:
- Your signed Liability and confidentiality waiver for job shadows
- Your certificate of completion confirming you have done the LearningHub Hand hygiene eModule within the last year.
Kids 14 years of age or younger can connect with their high school and ask about the grade nine Take our Kid to Work Day (TOKTWD). This happens every year in November.
*We will assess job shadow applications according to our Job shadow policy. Our Student Practice and New Initiatives team will carefully review the applications and make decisions based on the policy’s guidelines.
Youth (age 14 – 18 years) job shadow applications are closed.
A criminal record check, also known as a background check or police check, is a process that involves examining an individual’s criminal history to determine if they have any prior convictions or involvement in criminal activities.
In health care organizations like Fraser Health, it is really important to keep patient information safe and private. To do that, they follow a law called the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). This law tells them how to handle personal information properly.
When health care organizations do a criminal record check, they can find out if someone has a history of breaking the law. This is important when allowing people to observe or shadow health care professionals. The check helps ensure that only individuals who can be trusted to respect patient privacy and not misuse or access patient information without permission are allowed to participate in a job shadow. The main goal is to keep patients’ private information safe and make sure everyone follows the rules to protect their privacy.
- Go to your local police station: Visit the police station in your area in British Columbia.
- Ask for the form: Request the form you need to fill out to get a regular criminal record check. You can usually find it on the police station’s website or get a copy directly from them.
- Fill out the form: Complete the form with your personal information like your full name, date of birth, address and contact details. Make sure to provide accurate and up-to-date information.
- Submit the form and identification: Give the completed form to the police along with some identification documents. Usually, they will ask for a valid photo ID, such as a passport or driver’s license. They may also require proof of your address.
- Pay the fee: There is a fee to get a regular criminal record check. Check with the police station about how much you need to pay and make the payment.
- Wait for the results: It takes time for them to process the criminal record check. It can take a few weeks. The police will let you know when the results are ready.
- Collect your criminal record check: Once the check is processed, you can go back to the police station and collect the results. They will give you a document that shows the outcome of the check.
Remember that the exact process and requirements may vary slightly depending on where you live in British Columbia and the specific police station you visit. It’s always a good idea to check the official website or contact the police station directly for the most accurate and up-to-date information on getting a regular criminal record check.
If you don’t have a high school teacher who can write a reference letter for you, please ask someone who knows you well and can vouch for your character to provide a reference instead.
For your safety during your job shadow at Fraser Health, we would like to know which, if any, immunizations you have. We ask about your immunizations because, in certain situations, you might come into contact with these illnesses.
Please note that you don’t need to have all of your immunizations, but it’s important for us to know which ones you have received to ensure your safety during your job shadow. By knowing your immunization status, we can make sure that you don’t go to a unit or area where there is a risk of disease you are not immunized against. This helps protect you and others from potential infections and keeps everyone safe and healthy.
If you can’t find your immunization records, don’t worry. Here’s what you can do:
- Contact your doctor or the clinic where you got vaccinated: They might have your records on file and can provide you with a copy.
- Check with your school or previous places you attended: They may have records of your immunizations, especially if they require them for enrollment.
- Find further options on ImmunizeBC.
- Learn more about requesting immunization records.
Name of immunization | What it is for |
Flu vaccine | Getting the annual flu vaccine helps protect against seasonal flu and prevents its spread to vulnerable patients. |
Hepatitis B vaccine | This vaccine is recommended for individuals who may come into contact with blood or bodily fluids, as it prevents hepatitis B, a liver disease. |
MMR vaccine | If you don’t have immunity, the MMR vaccine protects against measles, mumps and rubella, which are highly contagious diseases. |
Varicella (Chickenpox) vaccine | If you haven’t had chickenpox or received the vaccine, the varicella vaccine prevents this contagious viral infection. |
Tdap (Tetanus) vaccine | As a booster, the Tdap vaccine protects against tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis (whooping cough). It is typically given every 10 years. |
To do a job shadow in Fraser Health, you must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. This means you need to have received the recommended two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine approved by the World Health Organization (WHO). The two doses need to be a single WHO-approved vaccine or a combination of approved vaccines.
Getting vaccinated against COVID-19 is important because it protects you, keeps others safe and aligns with the Provincial Health Officer of British Columbia. It helps prevent severe illness, keeps health care settings secure and follows Fraser Health guidelines.