Barnum Mary G
Springfield College, Springfield, MA 01109, USA.
J Athl Train. 2008 May-Jun;43(3):284-92. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-43.3.284.
The current trend in athletic training clinical education places greater emphasis on the quality of interactions occurring between Approved Clinical Instructors (ACIs) and athletic training students (ATSs). Among other attributes, the ability of ACIs to facilitate and direct quality clinical learning experiences may be influenced by the skill with which the ACI is able to use selected teaching strategies.
To gain insight into ACIs' use of questioning as a specific teaching strategy during the clinical education experiences of undergraduate ATSs.
Qualitative case study design involving initial and stimulated-recall interviews, prolonged field observations, and audio recording of ACI-ATS interactions.
The primary athletic training facility at one athletic training education program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education.
The 8 ACI participants included 3 full-time athletic training education program faculty members and 5 graduate-level assistants. The 24 ATS participants included 1 senior, 17 juniors, and 6 sophomores.
Transcribed data collected from 8 initial interviews, 23 field observations, 23 audio-recorded ACI-ATS interactions and 54 stimulated-recall interviews were analyzed through microscopic, open, and axial coding, as well as coding for process. The cognition level of questions posed by ACIs was analyzed according to Sellappah and colleagues' Question Classification Framework.
The ACI participants posed 712 questions during the 23 observation periods. Of the total questions, 70.37% were classified as low-level cognitive questions and 17.00% as high-level cognitive questions. The remaining 12.64% were classified as other.
Although all ACIs used questioning during clinical instruction, 2 distinct questioning patterns were identified: strategic questioning and nonstrategic questioning. The way ACIs sequenced questions (their questioning pattern) appeared to be more important than the number of specific cognitive-level questions posed. Nonstrategic questioning appears to support knowledge and comprehension, whereas strategic questioning appears to support critical thinking.
运动训练临床教育的当前趋势更加强调经认可的临床指导教师(ACIs)与运动训练学生(ATSs)之间互动的质量。在其他特质中,ACIs促进和指导高质量临床学习体验的能力可能会受到ACIs运用所选教学策略的技巧的影响。
深入了解ACIs在本科ATSs临床教育经历中作为一种特定教学策略使用提问的情况。
定性案例研究设计,包括初始访谈和激发性回忆访谈、长期实地观察以及ACIs与ATSs互动的音频记录。
一个经运动训练教育认证委员会认证的运动训练教育项目的主要运动训练设施。
8名ACIs参与者包括3名全职运动训练教育项目教员和5名研究生水平的助理。24名ATSs参与者包括1名大四学生、17名大三学生和6名大二学生。
从8次初始访谈、23次实地观察、23次ACIs与ATSs互动的音频记录以及54次激发性回忆访谈中收集的转录数据,通过微观、开放和轴心编码以及过程编码进行分析。根据Sellappah及其同事的问题分类框架分析ACIs提出问题的认知水平。
在23个观察期内,ACIs参与者提出了712个问题。在所有问题中,70.37%被归类为低水平认知问题,17.00%为高水平认知问题。其余12.64%被归类为其他。
虽然所有ACIs在临床教学中都使用了提问,但识别出了2种不同的提问模式:策略性提问和非策略性提问。ACIs对问题的排序方式(他们的提问模式)似乎比提出的特定认知水平问题的数量更重要。非策略性提问似乎支持知识和理解,而策略性提问似乎支持批判性思维。