Mathers Jonathan, Parry Jayne
Department of Public Health and Epidemiology, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, West Midlands, UK.
Med Educ. 2009 Mar;43(3):219-28. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2008.03274.x.
Students from lower socio-economic circumstances remain under-represented in UK medical schools despite recent shifts in other demographic variables and specific policy emphasis on widening participation (WP). This study aimed to further understanding of the reasons for this.
Volunteer participants at three English medical schools took part in narrative-style, in-depth interviews examining their pathways into medicine and the relationships between these pathways and participants' socio-cultural, educational and family backgrounds. This analysis uses findings from interviews with 12 mature students from working-class backgrounds. It employs theoretical work from the wider field of education sociology that has investigated the relationship between higher education decision making and class.
This study demonstrates how 'normal working-class biographies', constructed by the majority of students targeted by WP activity, result from the influences of socio-cultural context, as well as familial and institutional habitus. The resultant influence on habitus as identity and, in particular, the disjuncture between working-class perceptions of medicine and individual identities are key to understanding the reasons behind the low number of working-class applicants to medical school.
Interventions that aim to increase participation rates in medicine must address this disjuncture. This might be achieved by re-orienting working-class identities and perceptions of medicine as a profession. However, it should be acknowledged that 'identity conflict' is related to the elite image that medicine maintains within contemporary society and, as such, efforts to re-orient individual working-class identities may have only a limited impact on overall participation rates.
尽管近期其他人口统计学变量有所变化,且英国有特定政策强调扩大参与度(WP),但社会经济背景较低的学生在英国医学院中的占比仍然较低。本研究旨在进一步了解其原因。
三所英国医学院的志愿者参与了叙事风格的深度访谈,探讨他们进入医学领域的途径以及这些途径与参与者的社会文化、教育和家庭背景之间的关系。本分析采用了对12名来自工人阶级背景的成熟学生的访谈结果。它运用了教育社会学更广泛领域的理论研究,该领域研究了高等教育决策与阶级之间的关系。
本研究表明,大多数被WP活动针对的学生所构建的“正常工人阶级经历”,是社会文化背景以及家庭和制度惯习影响的结果。由此对作为身份认同的惯习产生的影响,尤其是工人阶级对医学的认知与个人身份之间的脱节,是理解工人阶级申请医学院人数较少背后原因的关键。
旨在提高医学参与率的干预措施必须解决这种脱节问题。这可以通过重新定位工人阶级身份以及对医学作为一种职业的认知来实现。然而,应该认识到“身份冲突”与医学在当代社会中保持的精英形象有关,因此,重新定位个体工人阶级身份的努力可能对总体参与率的影响有限。