D.F. Balmer is associate professor of pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6805-4062. A. Darden is director of faculty development, Department of Pediatrics, and director, Academy of Teaching Scholars, College of Medicine, Oklahoma University Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. L. Chandran is vice dean for academic and faculty affairs and Distinguished Teaching Professor, Stony Brook University School of Medicine, Stony Brook, New York. D. D'Alessandro is professor of pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa. M.E. Gusic is senior advisor for educational affairs and professor of medical education, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia.
Acad Med. 2018 Jul;93(7):1085-1090. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002181.
Despite academic medicine's endorsement of professional development and mentoring, little is known about what junior faculty learn about mentoring in implicit curricula of professional development programs, and how their mentor identity evolves in this context. The authors explored what faculty-participants in the Educational Scholars Program implicitly learned about mentoring and how the implicit curriculum affected mentor identity transformation.
Semistructured interviews with 19 of 36 former faculty-participants were conducted in 2016. Consistent with constructivist grounded theory, data collection and analysis overlapped. The authors created initial codes informed by Ibarra's model for identity transformation, iteratively revised codes based on incoming data patterns, and created visual representations of relationships amongst codes to gain a holistic, shared understanding of the data.
In the implicit curriculum, faculty-participants learned the importance of having multiple mentors, the value of peer mentors, and the incremental process of becoming a mentor. The authors used Ibarra's model to understand how the implicit curriculum worked to transform mentor identity: Faculty-participants reported observing mentors, experimenting with different ways to mentor and to be a mentor, and evaluating themselves as mentors.
The Educational Scholars Program's implicit curriculum facilitated faculty-participants taking on mentor identity via opportunities it afforded to watch mentors, experiment with mentoring, and evaluate self as mentor, key ingredients for identity construction. Leaders of professional development programs can develop faculty as mentors by capitalizing on what faculty-participants learn in the implicit curriculum and deliberately structuring postgraduation mentoring opportunities.
尽管学术医学界认可专业发展和指导,但对于初级教员在专业发展计划的隐性课程中了解到什么有关指导的知识,以及他们的导师身份在这种背景下如何演变,知之甚少。作者探讨了教育学者计划中的教师参与者在隐性课程中隐性地了解到什么有关指导的知识,以及隐性课程如何影响导师身份的转变。
2016 年,对 36 名前教师参与者中的 19 名进行了半结构化访谈。与建构主义扎根理论一致,数据收集和分析重叠。作者根据伊巴拉的身份转变模型创建了初始代码,根据传入的数据模式迭代修改代码,并创建代码之间关系的可视化表示,以获得对数据的整体、共同理解。
在隐性课程中,教师参与者了解到拥有多个导师的重要性、朋辈导师的价值以及成为导师的渐进过程。作者使用伊巴拉的模型来理解隐性课程是如何发挥作用来转变导师身份的:教师参与者报告说观察导师、尝试不同的指导方式和成为导师的方式,并评估自己作为导师的表现。
教育学者计划的隐性课程通过提供观察导师、尝试指导和自我评估导师的机会,促进了教师参与者承担导师身份,这是身份建构的关键要素。专业发展计划的领导者可以通过利用教师参与者在隐性课程中所学到的知识,并有意地构建毕业后的指导机会,来培养教师成为导师。