Rogers John
Department of Family and Community Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
Med Educ. 2005 Nov;39(11):1110-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2929.2005.02317.x.
This paper explores the thesis that medical education is the cultural transmission to learners of specific values, which are increasingly expressed as graduation competencies. As testing is a powerful way to transmit cultural values to learners in a brief period of time, competency-based assessments can be an instrument of cultural compression in medical education.
The author reviewed medical literature to illustrate the concepts from educational anthropology, led the process one medical school used to develop its list of graduation competencies, and conducted a citation search about competency domains.
There is support in the literature for viewing medical education as an example of cultural transmission and compression and for the assertion that testing influences student behaviour. The graduation competency statements developed by the school reflect traditional and emergent values. The citation search data confirmed that some competency domains reflected traditional values, while others reflected more emergent values.
Concepts from educational anthropology are relevant to medical education and provide perspectives for understanding contemporary issues such as competency-based assessments.
本文探讨这样一个论点,即医学教育是向学习者传递特定价值观的文化传播过程,这些价值观越来越多地以毕业能力的形式体现出来。由于测试是在短时间内向学习者传递文化价值观的有力方式,基于能力的评估可能成为医学教育中文化压缩的一种手段。
作者查阅医学文献以阐释教育人类学的概念,主导了一所医学院制定其毕业能力清单的过程,并对能力领域进行了引文检索。
文献支持将医学教育视为文化传播与压缩的一个例子,也支持测试会影响学生行为这一论断。该学校制定的毕业能力陈述反映了传统价值观和新出现的价值观。引文检索数据证实,一些能力领域反映了传统价值观,而其他领域则反映了更多新出现的价值观。
教育人类学的概念与医学教育相关,并为理解诸如基于能力的评估等当代问题提供了视角。