Garth Belinda, Kirby Catherine, Silberberg Peter, Brown James
Southern General Practice Training (Eastern Victoria GP Training), 50 Northways Road, Churchill, Victoria, 3842, Australia.
School of Rural Health, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Victoria, Australia.
BMC Med Educ. 2016 Aug 19;16(1):211. doi: 10.1186/s12909-016-0736-8.
Learning plans are a compulsory component of the training and assessment requirements of general practice (GP) registrars in Australia. There is a small but growing number of studies reporting that learning plans are not well accepted or utilised in general practice training. There is a lack of research examining this apparent contradiction. The aim of this study was to examine use and perceived utility of formal learning plans in GP vocational training.
This mixed-method Australian national research project utilised online learning plan usage data from 208 GP registrars and semi-structured focus groups and telephone interviews with 35 GP registrars, 12 recently fellowed GPs, 16 supervisors and 17 medical educators across three Regional Training Providers (RTPs). Qualitative data were analysed thematically using template analysis.
Learning plans were used mostly as a log of activities rather than as a planning tool. Most learning needs were entered and ticked off as complete on the same day. Learning plans were perceived as having little value for registrars in their journey to becoming a competent GP, and as a bureaucratic hurdle serving as a distraction rather than an aid to learning. The process of learning planning was valued more so than the documentation of learning planning.
This study provides creditable evidence that mandated learning plans are broadly considered by users to be a bureaucratic impediment with little value as a learning tool. It is more important to support registrars in planning their learning than to enforce documentation of this process in a learning plan. If learning planning is to be an assessed competence, methods of assessment other than the submission of a formal learning plan should be explored.
学习计划是澳大利亚全科医生(GP)注册实习生培训和评估要求的一个强制性组成部分。有少量但数量在不断增加的研究报告称,学习计划在全科医生培训中未得到充分接受或利用。目前缺乏对这一明显矛盾现象的研究。本研究的目的是调查正式学习计划在GP职业培训中的使用情况和感知效用。
这个采用混合方法的澳大利亚全国性研究项目利用了来自208名GP注册实习生的在线学习计划使用数据,以及对来自三个区域培训提供商(RTP)的35名GP注册实习生、12名最近获得资格的GP、16名导师和17名医学教育工作者进行的半结构化焦点小组访谈和电话访谈。定性数据采用模板分析法进行主题分析。
学习计划大多被用作活动记录,而非规划工具。大多数学习需求在同一天被录入并标记为已完成。学习计划被认为对注册实习生成为一名合格的GP的过程价值不大,是一个官僚主义障碍,起干扰作用而非有助于学习。学习计划制定过程比学习计划的记录更受重视。
本研究提供了可信证据,表明用户普遍认为强制性学习计划是一种官僚主义障碍,作为学习工具价值不大。支持注册实习生规划他们的学习比在学习计划中强制要求记录这一过程更重要。如果学习计划制定要作为一项被评估的能力,应探索除提交正式学习计划之外的其他评估方法。