Faculty of Medicine, Research in Education, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, LEARN! Academy, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Med Educ. 2022 Apr;56(4):432-443. doi: 10.1111/medu.14710. Epub 2021 Dec 19.
Active learning relies on students' engagement with teachers, study materials and/or each other. Although medical education has adopted active learning as a core component of medical training, teachers have difficulties recognising when and why their students engage or disengage and how to teach in ways that optimise engagement. With a better understanding of the dynamics of student engagement in small-group active learning settings, teachers could be facilitated in effectively engaging their students.
We conducted a video-stimulated recall study to explore medical students' engagement during small-group learning activities. We recorded one teaching session of two different groups and selected critical moments of apparent (dis)engagement. These moments served as prompts for the 15 individual semi-structured interviews we held. Interview data were analysed using Template Analysis style of thematic analysis. To guide the analysis, we used a framework that describes student engagement as a dynamic and multidimensional concept, consisting of behavioural, cognitive and emotional components.
The analysis uncovered three main findings: (1) In-class student engagement followed a spiral-like pattern. Once students were engaged or disengaged on one dimension, other dimensions were likely to follow suit. (2) Students' willingness to engage in class was decided before class, depending on their perception of a number of personal, social and educational antecedents of engagement. (3) Distinguishing engagement from disengagement appeared to be difficult for teachers, because the intention behind student behaviour was not always identifiable.
This study adds to the literature by illuminating the dynamic process of student engagement and explaining the difficulty of recognising and influencing this process in practice. Based on the importance of discerning the intentions behind student behaviour, we advise teachers to use their observations of student (dis)engagement to initiate interaction with students with open and inviting prompts. This can help teachers to (re-)engage students in their classrooms.
主动学习依赖于学生与教师、学习材料和/或彼此之间的互动。尽管医学教育已经将主动学习作为医学培训的核心组成部分,但教师很难识别学生何时以及为何参与或不参与,以及如何以最佳参与方式进行教学。通过更好地了解学生在小组主动学习环境中的参与动态,教师可以更有效地吸引学生。
我们进行了一项视频刺激回忆研究,以探讨医学生在小组学习活动中的参与情况。我们记录了两个不同小组的一个教学环节,并选择了明显(不)参与的关键时刻。这些时刻为我们进行的 15 次个人半结构化访谈提供了提示。使用模板分析风格的主题分析对访谈数据进行了分析。为了指导分析,我们使用了一个框架,该框架将学生参与描述为一个动态和多维的概念,包括行为、认知和情感成分。
分析揭示了三个主要发现:(1)课堂学生参与遵循螺旋式模式。一旦学生在一个维度上参与或不参与,其他维度很可能也会效仿。(2)学生在课堂上的参与意愿是在课前决定的,取决于他们对许多个人、社会和教育参与前因的感知。(3)区分参与和不参与对教师来说似乎很困难,因为学生行为背后的意图并不总是可识别的。
本研究通过阐明学生参与的动态过程,并解释在实践中识别和影响这一过程的困难,为文献增添了新内容。基于辨别学生行为背后意图的重要性,我们建议教师利用对学生(不)参与的观察,用开放和邀请性的提示来启动与学生的互动。这可以帮助教师重新吸引学生参与课堂。