Pre-roling: an operational framework for facilitators and simulating participants (SPs) to prepare for both acting and educating safely

  • Casper Danholt Iuul
  • , Peter Dieckmann
  • , Birgitte Bruun*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Sometimes scenario-based simulations do not go as expected because facilitator and simulating participant (SP) are not sufficiently aligned. This innovation paper presents a pre-roling framework that offers an operational, theoretically informed tool for facilitators and SPs to prepare systematically for scenario-based simulations in health professions education. The framework development was based on four months of ethnographic fieldwork at the Copenhagen Academy for Medical Education and Simulation (CAMES) and informed by action theory.

The pre-roling framework guides facilitators and SPs through five analytically distinct aspects of simulation performance — meaning (educational purpose), narrative (intended course of events), style (tone, tempo), character (the portrayed person), and health professions education (clinical picture, learning environment, task distribution, and care for the SP). Facilitators hold primary responsibility for meaning, narrative and style, while SPs hold primary responsibility for the character, with explicit collaboration across all domains.

The framework and its accompanying pocket card and worksheet were iteratively refined in dialogue with SPs, course leaders and scenario designers. It is intended as a flexible, context-sensitive preparation tool that can be used symmetrically by SPs and facilitators, from novice to experienced, and in diverse simulation settings. It fills a previously unoccupied space between general guidelines and the moment of action by systematizing preparation without prescribing content, thereby supporting clearer alignment, more deliberate improvisation, and explicit attention to SP safety. Using the framework can reduce dissonance between SPs and facilitators, enhance the coherence of dramaturgical and educational intentions, improve learners’ experiential learning opportunities, and help prevent distress among SPs.
Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvances in Simulation
ISSN2059-0628
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2026

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