H. Cunningham is associate professor of pediatrics, Division of Child and Adolescent Health, Department of Pediatrics, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, Columbia University, New York, New York; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1686-0497 .
D.S. Taylor is associate professor of medicine, Department of Medicine, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1999-0388 .
Acad Med. 2021 Aug 1;96(8):1168-1174. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003814. Epub 2020 Nov 3.
To investigate students' experience (over time) with meta-reflection writing exercises, called Signature Reflections. These exercises were used to strengthen reflective capacity, as part of a 4-year reflective writing portfolio curriculum that builds on a recognized strategy for reflection (narrative medicine) and employs longitudinal faculty-mentors.
In 2018, the authors conducted 5 focus groups with 18 third-year students from the Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons class of 2019 to examine students' experience with Signature Reflections. Using an iterative, thematic approach, they developed codes to reflect common patterns in the transcripts, distilled conceptually similar codes, and assembled the code categories into themes.
Three core themes (safe space, narrative experience, mirror of self) and 1 overarching theme (moving through time) were identified. Students frequently experienced relief at having a safe reflective space that promoted grappling with their fears or vulnerabilities and highlighted contextual factors (e.g., trusted faculty-mentors, protected time) that fostered a safe space for reflection and exploration. They often emphasized the value of tangible documentation of their medical school journey (narrative experience) and reported using Signature Reflections to examine their emerging identity (mirror of self). Overlapping with the core themes was a deep appreciation for the temporal perspective facilitated by the Signature Reflections (moving through time).
A longitudinal narrative medicine-based portfolio curriculum with pauses for meta-reflection allowed students, with faculty support, to observe their trajectory through medical school, explore fears and vulnerabilities, and narrate their own growth. Findings suggest that narrative medicine curricula should be required and sufficiently longitudinal to facilitate opportunities to practice the skill of writing for insight, foster relationships with faculty, and strengthen students' temporal perspectives of their development.
调查学生对元反思写作练习(称为 Signature Reflections)的体验(随时间推移)。这些练习用于增强反思能力,作为一个为期四年的反思写作作品集课程的一部分,该课程建立在一种被认可的反思策略(叙事医学)的基础上,并采用了纵向的教师导师制。
2018 年,作者对哥伦比亚大学瓦格洛斯外科学院 2019 届的 18 名三年级学生进行了 5 次焦点小组讨论,以研究学生对 Signature Reflections 的体验。他们使用迭代的主题方法开发代码来反映转录本中的常见模式,将概念上相似的代码提炼出来,并将代码类别组合成主题。
确定了三个核心主题(安全空间、叙事体验、自我镜像)和一个总体主题(穿越时间)。学生经常感到欣慰的是,有一个安全的反思空间,可以促进他们应对恐惧或脆弱性,并强调促进反思和探索的安全空间的相关因素(例如,可信赖的教师导师、受保护的时间)。他们经常强调他们医学院之旅的有形记录(叙事体验)的价值,并报告使用 Signature Reflections 来审视他们不断发展的身份(自我镜像)。与核心主题重叠的是 Signature Reflections 带来的对时间视角的深刻理解(穿越时间)。
具有叙事医学基础的纵向作品集课程,加上暂停进行元反思,使学生在教师的支持下,能够观察自己在医学院的轨迹,探索恐惧和脆弱性,并叙述自己的成长。研究结果表明,叙事医学课程应该是必修的,并且要有足够的纵向时间,以提供实践写作以获得洞察力的机会,培养与教师的关系,并加强学生对自身发展的时间视角。