J.L. Bullock is a first-year resident in internal medicine, University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California.
T. Lockspeiser is assistant dean of medical education-assessment, evaluation, and outcomes, and associate professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
Acad Med. 2020 Nov;95(11S Association of American Medical Colleges Learn Serve Lead: Proceedings of the 59th Annual Research in Medical Education Presentations):S58-S66. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003628.
Stereotype threat is an important psychological phenomenon in which fear of fulfilling negative stereotypes about one's group impairs performance. The effects of stereotype threat in medical education are poorly characterized. This study examined the prevalence of racial/ethnic stereotype threat amongst fourth-year medical students and explored its impact on students' clinical experience.
This was an explanatory sequential mixed methods study at 2 institutions in 2019. First, the authors administered the quantitative Stereotype Vulnerability Scale (SVS) to fourth-year medical students. The authors then conducted semistructured interviews among a purposive sample of students with high SVS scores, using a qualitative phenomenographic approach to analyze experiences of stereotype threat. The research team considered reflexivity through group discussion and journaling.
Overall, 52% (184/353) of students responded to the survey. Collectively, 28% of students had high vulnerability to stereotype threat: 82% of Black, 45% of Asian, 43% of Latinx, and 4% of White students. Eighteen students participated in interviews. Stereotype threat was a dynamic, 3-stage process triggered when students experienced the workplace through the colored lens of race/ethnicity by standing out, reliving past experiences, and witnessing microaggressions. Next, students engaged in internal dialogue to navigate racially charged events and workplace power dynamics. These efforts depleted cognitive resources and interfered with learning. Finally, students responded and coped to withstand threats. Immediate and deferred interventions from allies reduced stereotype threat.
Stereotype threat is common, particularly among non-White students, and interferes with learning. Increased minority representation and developing evidence-based strategies for allyship around microaggressions could mitigate effects of stereotype threat.
刻板印象威胁是一种重要的心理现象,即对自己群体的负面刻板印象的恐惧会损害表现。刻板印象威胁在医学教育中的影响还没有很好地描述。本研究调查了四年级医学生中种族/族裔刻板印象威胁的普遍程度,并探讨了其对学生临床经验的影响。
这是 2019 年在 2 个机构进行的一项解释性顺序混合方法研究。首先,作者向四年级医学生发放了定量刻板印象脆弱性量表(Stereotype Vulnerability Scale,SVS)。然后,作者通过半结构化访谈,对 SVS 得分较高的学生进行了有目的的抽样,采用质的现象学方法分析了刻板印象威胁的体验。研究团队通过小组讨论和日记来考虑反思。
共有 353 名学生中的 52%(184 名)对调查做出了回应。总体而言,28%的学生对刻板印象威胁的脆弱性较高:黑人学生为 82%,亚裔学生为 45%,拉丁裔学生为 43%,白人学生为 4%。18 名学生参加了访谈。刻板印象威胁是一个动态的、三阶段的过程,当学生通过种族/族裔的有色眼镜体验工作场所时,这种威胁就会被触发,他们会重新体验过去的经历,并目睹微侵犯。然后,学生们进行内部对话,以驾驭带有种族色彩的事件和工作场所的权力动态。这些努力消耗了认知资源,并干扰了学习。最后,学生们做出反应并应对以承受威胁。盟友的即时和延迟干预措施减少了刻板印象威胁。
刻板印象威胁很常见,尤其是在非白人学生中,并且会干扰学习。增加少数族裔的代表性,并制定基于证据的盟友策略,以应对微侵犯,可能会减轻刻板印象威胁的影响。