Gonsalves Catherine, Zaidi Zareen
University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville FL, USA.
Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville FL, USA.
J Educ Eval Health Prof. 2016 Aug 31;13:31. doi: 10.3352/jeehp.2016.13.31. eCollection 2016.
There have been critiques that competency training, which defines the roles of a physician by simple, discrete tasks or measurable competencies, can cause students to compartmentalize and focus mainly on being assessed without understanding how the interconnected competencies help shape their role as future physicians. Losing the meaning and interaction of competencies can result in a focus on 'doing the work of a physician' rather than identity formation and 'being a physician.' This study aims to understand how competency-based education impacts the development of a medical student's identity.
Three ceramic models representing three core competencies 'medical knowledge,' 'patient care,' and 'professionalism' were used as sensitizing objects, while medical students reflected on the impact of competency-based education on identity formation. Qualitative analysis was used to identify common themes.
Students across all four years of medical school related to the 'professionalism' competency domain (50%). They reflected that 'being an empathetic physician' was the most important competency. Overall, students agreed that competency-based education played a significant role in the formation of their identity. Some students reflected on having difficulty in visualizing the interconnectedness between competencies, while others did not. Students reported that the assessment structure deemphasized 'professionalism' as a competency.
Students perceive 'professionalism' as a competency that impacts their identity formation in the social role of 'being a doctor,' albeit a competency they are less likely to be assessed on. High-stakes exams, including the United States Medical Licensing Exam clinical skills exam, promote this perception.
有人批评能力培训通过简单、离散的任务或可衡量的能力来界定医生的角色,这可能导致学生将知识分割开来,主要专注于接受评估,而不理解相互关联的能力如何塑造他们未来医生的角色。失去能力的意义和相互作用可能导致专注于“做医生的工作”,而不是身份形成和“成为一名医生”。本研究旨在了解基于能力的教育如何影响医学生身份的发展。
使用三个代表“医学知识”“患者护理”和“专业精神”这三项核心能力的陶瓷模型作为引发思考的物品,同时让医学生思考基于能力的教育对身份形成的影响。采用定性分析来确定共同主题。
医学院四年制的所有学生都提到了“专业精神”能力领域(50%)。他们反映“成为一名有同理心的医生”是最重要的能力。总体而言,学生们一致认为基于能力的教育在他们身份的形成中发挥了重要作用。一些学生反映难以想象能力之间的相互联系,而另一些学生则没有这种困扰。学生们报告说评估结构没有将“专业精神”作为一项重要能力来强调。
学生将“专业精神”视为一种影响他们在“成为一名医生”这一社会角色中身份形成的能力,尽管这是一项他们不太可能接受评估的能力。包括美国医学执照考试临床技能考试在内的高风险考试助长了这种认知。