Educational Development Unit, Imperial College London, Level 5, Sherfield Building, Exhibition Road South Kensington, London, SW7 2AZ, UK.
Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Imperial College, London, UK.
BMC Med Educ. 2018 Jul 3;18(1):156. doi: 10.1186/s12909-018-1251-x.
Role modelling is widely accepted as being a highly influential teaching and learning method in medical education but little attention is given to understanding how students learn from role models. This study focuses on role modelling as an active, dynamic process, involving observational learning and aims to explore the process involved, including strategies that learners and medical teachers use to support this.
To gain insight into medical students' and clinical teachers' understanding of learning through role modelling, a qualitative, interpretative methodology was adopted, using one-to-one semi-structured interviews. Six final year medical students and five clinical teachers were purposefully sampled and interviewed. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed. The data were then analysed using open and axial coding before codes were combined to develop broader themes.
Students could identify ways in which they learnt from role models but acknowledged that this was complex and haphazard. They described selectively and consciously paying attention, using retention strategies, reproducing observed behaviour and being motivated to imitate. Students evidenced the powerful impact of direct and vicarious reinforcement. Clinical teachers reported using strategies to help students learn, but these were not always consciously or consistently applied or informed by teachers' understanding of their students' cognitive processing.
Findings illustrate in what ways the process of learning from role models in clinical settings is challenging. They also support the relevancy and usefulness of Bandura's four stage social learning model for understanding this process and informing recommendations to make learning from role modelling more systematic and effective.
角色模范被广泛认为是医学教育中一种非常有影响力的教学方法,但很少有人关注学生如何从角色模范中学习。本研究侧重于将角色模范作为一种积极、动态的过程,涉及观察学习,并旨在探索所涉及的过程,包括学习者和医学教师用来支持这一过程的策略。
为了深入了解医学生和临床教师通过角色模范学习的理解,采用了定性、解释性方法,使用一对一的半结构化访谈。有针对性地抽取了六名六年级医学生和五名临床教师进行访谈。访谈进行了录音并转录。然后使用开放式和轴向编码对数据进行分析,然后将代码组合以开发更广泛的主题。
学生可以识别出他们从角色模范中学到的方法,但也承认这是复杂和偶然的。他们描述了有选择地、有意识地注意、使用保留策略、再现观察到的行为,并受到模仿的激励。学生证明了直接和间接强化的强大影响。临床教师报告了使用策略来帮助学生学习,但这些策略并不总是有意识地或一致地应用,也不受教师对学生认知处理的理解的影响。
研究结果说明了在临床环境中从角色模范中学习的过程在哪些方面具有挑战性。它们还支持班杜拉的四阶段社会学习模型对于理解这一过程的相关性和有用性,并为使从角色模范中学习更加系统和有效提供建议。