Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon Saskatchewan, Canada.
BMC Med Educ. 2011 Sep 23;11:67. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-11-67.
Self-reflection and reflective practice are increasingly considered as essential attributes of competent professionals functioning in complex and ever-changing healthcare systems of the 21st century. The aim of this study was to determine the extent of students' awareness and understanding of the reflective process and the meaning of 'self-reflection' within the contextual framework of their learning environment in the first-year of their medical/dental education. We endorse that the introduction of such explicit educational tasks at this early stage enhances and promotes students' awareness, understanding, and proficiency of this skill in their continuing life-long health professional learning.
Over two years, students registered in first-year pathology at the University of Saskatchewan were introduced to a self-reflection assignment which comprised in the submission of a one-page reflective document to a template of reflective questions provided in the given context of their learning environment. This was a mandatory but ungraded component at the midterm and final examinations. These documents were individually analyzed and thematically categorized to a "5 levels-of-reflection-awareness" scale using a specially-designed rubric based on the accepted major theories of reflection that included students' identification of: 1) personal abilities, 2) personal learning styles 3) relationships between course material and student history 4) emotional responses and 5) future applications.
410 self-reflection documents were analyzed. The student self-awareness on personal learning style (72.7% level 3+) and course content (55.2% level 3+) were well-reflected. Reflections at a level 1 awareness included identification of a) specific teaching strategies utilized to enhance learning (58.4%), b) personal strengths/weaknesses (53%), and c) emotional responses, values, and beliefs (71.5%). Students' abilities to connect information to life experiences and to future events with understanding were more evenly distributed across all 5 levels of reflection-awareness.
Exposure to self-reflection assignments in the early years of undergraduate medical education increases student awareness and promotes the creation of personal meaning of one's reactions, values, and premises in the context of student learning environments. Early introduction with repetition to such cognitive processes as practice tools increases engagement in reflection that may facilitate proficiency in mastering this competency leading to the creation of future reflective health professionals.
自我反思和反思实践被认为是 21 世纪复杂且不断变化的医疗保健系统中胜任专业人员的基本属性。本研究旨在确定学生在医学/牙科教育第一年的学习环境背景下,对反思过程和“自我反思”含义的认识和理解程度。我们认为,在这个早期阶段引入这种明确的教育任务,可以增强和促进学生对这一技能的认识、理解和熟练程度,使他们在终身的健康专业学习中受益。
在两年的时间里,萨斯喀彻温大学一年级病理学的学生被引入一项自我反思作业,要求他们在给定的学习环境背景下,根据提供的模板,提交一份一页的反思文件,回答反思问题。这是期中考试和期末考试的一项强制性但不计分的作业。这些文件是根据接受的主要反思理论进行单独分析,并使用专门设计的量表进行主题分类,归入“5 级反思意识”量表。量表基于学生对以下内容的识别:1)个人能力,2)个人学习风格,3)课程材料与学生历史之间的关系,4)情绪反应,5)未来应用。
共分析了 410 份自我反思文件。学生对个人学习风格(72.7%达到第 3 级+)和课程内容(55.2%达到第 3 级+)的自我意识反映良好。在第 1 级意识水平的反思中包括识别:a)用于增强学习的特定教学策略(58.4%),b)个人优势/劣势(53%),和 c)情绪反应、价值观和信念(71.5%)。学生将信息与生活经历和未来事件联系起来并理解的能力在所有 5 级反思意识中分布更为均匀。
在本科医学教育的早期阶段,让学生接触自我反思作业可以提高学生的意识,并促进学生在学习环境中对自己的反应、价值观和前提的个人意义的理解。早期引入并重复这种认知过程作为实践工具,可以增加学生对反思的参与度,从而促进他们熟练掌握这一能力,最终培养出未来的反思型健康专业人员。