Tseng Eric K, Jo David, Shih Andrew W, De Wit Kerstin, Chan Teresa M
Division of Hematology and Thromboembolism Department of Medicine McMaster University Hamilton ON.
Department of Family and Community Medicine University of Toronto Toronto ON.
AEM Educ Train. 2019 Jan 6;3(2):179-187. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10315. eCollection 2019 Apr.
Needs assessments are important for developing online educational resources, but they frequently do not capture learning needs in the intrinsic physician competencies. Storytelling exercises, by promoting critical reflection and emphasizing values and context, may assist curriculum developers in identifying emergent knowledge gaps in these areas that are initially unknown to learners.
We developed an online curriculum for thrombosis and hemostasis based on an open-access online needs assessment comprised of a topic list, case scenarios, and storytelling exercise. In the storytelling exercise, learners described 1) a difficult clinical case and 2) that case was difficult. In this qualitative descriptive study, we performed a secondary thematic analysis of this storytelling data, coded for the CanMEDS 2015 intrinsic roles. Two investigators independently coded transcripts with iterative comparison.
A total of 143 respondents completed the storytelling exercise. All responses yielded a gap in medical expertise, while 25 (17.5%) described an additional intrinsic role. Learning needs in all six intrinsic roles were identified. The most commonly cited learning needs were in the leader (recognizing how resource allocation impacts health care), communicator (communicating knowledge with patients), and collaborator (unclear communication between providers) roles. These excerpts were notable for how they expressed the complexity and affective components of medicine.
Storytelling exercises can highlight context, attitudes, and relationships that provide depth to needs assessments. These narratives are a novel method of identifying gaps in intrinsic physician competencies that are initially unknown by learners (Johari window). These emergent intrinsic learning needs may be used to enrich learner-centered curricula.
需求评估对于开发在线教育资源很重要,但它们常常无法捕捉医生内在能力方面的学习需求。通过促进批判性反思并强调价值观和背景,故事讲述练习可能会帮助课程开发者识别这些领域中学习者最初未知的新出现的知识差距。
我们基于一项开放获取的在线需求评估开发了一门关于血栓形成与止血的在线课程,该评估包括一个主题列表、病例情景和故事讲述练习。在故事讲述练习中,学习者描述1)一个困难的临床病例以及2)该病例为何困难。在这项定性描述性研究中,我们对这些故事讲述数据进行了二次主题分析,按照《加拿大医学教育标准 2015》的内在角色进行编码。两名研究者独立对转录本进行编码并进行迭代比较。
共有143名受访者完成了故事讲述练习。所有回答都显示出医学专业知识方面的差距,而25人(17.5%)描述了另外一个内在角色。确定了所有六个内在角色方面的学习需求。最常被提及的学习需求存在于领导者(认识到资源分配如何影响医疗保健)、沟通者(与患者交流知识)和合作者(提供者之间沟通不清晰)角色中。这些摘录因其对医学复杂性和情感成分的表达而引人注目。
故事讲述练习可以突出背景、态度和关系,从而为需求评估提供深度。这些叙述是一种识别学习者最初未知的医生内在能力差距的新方法(乔哈里视窗)。这些新出现的内在学习需求可用于丰富以学习者为中心的课程。