Discipline of General Practice, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland.
School of Health Professions Education, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Med Educ. 2022 Jun;56(6):614-624. doi: 10.1111/medu.14727. Epub 2022 Jan 26.
There are growing concerns about the quality and consistency of postgraduate clinical education. In response, faculty development for clinical teachers has improved formal aspects such as the assessment of performance, but informal work-based teaching and learning have proved intractable. This problem has exposed a lack of research into how clinical teaching and learning are shaped by their cultural contexts. This paper explores the relationship between teacher-learner identity, educational practice and the workplace educational cultures of two major specialties: internal medicine and surgery.
This was a secondary analysis of a large dataset, comprising field notes, participant interviews, images and video-recordings gathered in an ethnographic study. The lead author embedded himself in four clinical teams (two surgical and two medical) in two different hospitals. The authors undertook a critical reanalysis of the observational dataset, using Dialogism and Figured Worlds theory to identify how teachers and postgraduate learners figured and authored their professional identities in the specialty-specific cultural worlds of surgery and internal medicine.
Surgery and internal medicine privileged different ways of being, knowing and talking in formal and informal settings, where trainees authored themselves as capable practitioners. The discourse of surgical education constructed proximal coaching relationships in which trainees placed themselves at reputational risk in a closely observed, embodied practice. Internal medicine constructed more distal educational relationships, in which trainees negotiated abstract representations of patients' presentations, which aligned to a greater or lesser degree with supervisors' representations.
Our research suggests that clinical education and the identity positions available to teachers and learners were strongly influenced by the cultural worlds of individual specialties. Attempts to change work-based learning should be founded on situated knowledge of specialty-specific clinical workplace cultures and should be done in collaboration with the people who work there, the clinicians.
人们对研究生临床教育的质量和一致性越来越关注。为应对这一问题,临床教师的师资发展已经改善了绩效评估等正式方面,但基于工作的非正式教学和学习仍然难以解决。这一问题揭示了一个研究空白,即临床教学和学习是如何受到其文化背景影响的。本文探讨了教师-学习者身份、教育实践以及内科学和外科学这两个主要专业的工作场所教育文化之间的关系。
这是对一个大型数据集的二次分析,其中包括在民族志研究中收集的现场笔记、参与者访谈、图像和视频记录。主要作者将自己嵌入到两个不同医院的四个临床团队(两个外科和两个内科)中。作者利用对话主义和具象世界理论对观察数据集进行了批判性重新分析,以确定教师和研究生学习者如何在外科和内科学的专业特定文化世界中塑造和创作自己的专业身份。
外科学和内科学在正式和非正式环境中都重视不同的存在方式、知识和交流方式,实习生将自己描绘成有能力的从业者。外科学教育的话语构建了近端辅导关系,实习生在密切观察和具体实践中冒着声誉风险。内科学构建了更为远程的教育关系,实习生在其中协商患者表现的抽象表现形式,这些表现形式与主管的表现形式在一定程度上相符。
我们的研究表明,临床教育以及教师和学习者可获得的身份地位受到个体专业文化世界的强烈影响。改变基于工作的学习的尝试应该建立在对特定专业临床工作场所文化的情境知识的基础上,并应与在那里工作的人(临床医生)合作进行。