Department of Physiotherapy, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa.
BMC Med Educ. 2013 Apr 10;13:51. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-13-51.
While there is evidence to suggest that teaching practices in clinical education should include activities that more accurately reflect the real world, many educators base their teaching on transmission models that encourage the rote learning of knowledge and technical skills. Technology-mediated instruction may facilitate the development of professional attributes that go beyond "having" knowledge and skills, but there is limited evidence for how to integrate technology into these innovative teaching approaches.
This study used a modified Delphi method to help identify the professional attributes of capable practitioners, the approaches to teaching that may facilitate the development of these attributes, and finally, how technology could be integrated with those teaching strategies in order to develop capable practitioners. Open-ended questions were used to gather data from three different expert panels, and results were thematically analysed.
Clinical educators should not view knowledge, skills and attitudes as a set of products of learning, but rather as a set of attributes that are developed during a learning process. Participants highlighted the importance of continuing personal and professional development that emphasised the role of values and emotional response to the clinical context. To develop these attributes, clinical educators should use teaching activities that are learner-centred, interactive, integrated, reflective and that promote engagement. When technology-mediated teaching activities are considered, they should promote the discussion of clinical encounters, facilitate the sharing of resources and experiences, encourage reflection on the learning process and be used to access content outside the classroom. In addition, educational outcomes must drive the integration of technology into teaching practice, rather than the features of the technology.
There is a need for a cultural change in clinical education, in which those involved with the professional training of healthcare professionals perceive teaching as more than the transmission of knowledge and technical skills. Process-oriented teaching practices that integrate technology as part of a carefully designed curriculum may have the potential to facilitate the development of capable healthcare graduates who are able to navigate the complexity of health systems and patient management in ways that go beyond the application of knowledge and skills.
虽然有证据表明临床教育中的教学实践应该包括更能准确反映现实世界的活动,但许多教育工作者仍基于传输模式进行教学,这种模式鼓励死记硬背知识和技术技能。技术介导的教学可能有助于培养超越“拥有”知识和技能的专业属性,但对于如何将技术融入这些创新教学方法的证据有限。
本研究使用改良 Delphi 法帮助确定有能力的从业者的专业属性、可能促进这些属性发展的教学方法,以及最终如何将技术与这些教学策略相结合以培养有能力的从业者。开放式问题用于从三个不同的专家小组收集数据,并进行主题分析。
临床教育者不应将知识、技能和态度视为学习的一组产物,而应将其视为在学习过程中发展的一组属性。参与者强调继续个人和专业发展的重要性,强调价值观和对临床环境的情感反应的作用。为了培养这些属性,临床教育者应使用以学习者为中心、互动、综合、反思和促进参与的教学活动。在考虑技术介导的教学活动时,它们应促进对临床遭遇的讨论,促进资源和经验的共享,鼓励对学习过程的反思,并用于访问课堂外的内容。此外,教育成果必须推动技术融入教学实践,而不是技术的特点。
临床教育需要进行文化变革,让参与医疗保健专业人员专业培训的人员将教学视为不仅仅是知识和技术技能的传授。以过程为导向的教学实践,将技术作为精心设计的课程的一部分进行整合,有可能培养出有能力的医疗保健毕业生,他们能够以超越知识和技能应用的方式驾驭医疗系统和患者管理的复杂性。