School of Health Professions Education, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
Department of Educational Development and Research, Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Science, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
BMC Med Educ. 2022 Mar 21;22(1):193. doi: 10.1186/s12909-022-03259-0.
Self-regulated learning is a key competence to engage in lifelong learning. Research increasingly acknowledges that medical students in clerkships need others to regulate their learning. The concept of "co-regulated learning" captures this act of regulating one's learning by interacting with others. To effectively cultivate such skills in students, we need to increase our understanding of co-regulated learning. This study aimed to identify the purposes for which students in different phases of clinical training engage others in their networks to regulate their learning.
In this social network study, we administered a questionnaire to 403 medical students during clinical clerkships (65.5% response rate). The questionnaire probed into the composition of students' co-regulatory networks and the purpose for which they engaged others in specified self-regulated learning activities. We calculated the proportion of students that engaged others in their networks for each regulatory activity. Additionally, we conducted ANOVAs to examine whether first-, second-, and third-year students differed in how they used their networks to support self-regulation.
Students used others within their co-regulatory networks to support a range of self-regulated learning activities. Whom students engaged, and the purpose of engagement, seemed to shift as students progressed through clinical training. Over time, the proportion of students engaging workplace supervisors to discuss learning goals, learning strategies, self-reflections and self-evaluations increased, whereas the proportion of students engaging peers to discuss learning strategies and how to work on learning goals in the workplace decreased. Of all purposes for which students engaged others measured, discussing self-reflections and self-evaluations were consistently among the ones most frequently mentioned.
Results reinforce the notion that medical students' regulation of learning is grounded in social interactions within co-regulatory networks students construct during clerkships. Findings elucidate the extent to which students enact self-regulatory learning within their co-regulatory networks and how their co-regulatory learning behaviors develop over time. Explicating the relevance of interactions within co-regulatory networks might help students and supervisors to purposefully engage in meaningful co-regulatory interactions. Additionally, co-regulatory interactions may assist students in regulating their learning in clinical workplaces as well as in honing their self-regulated learning skills.
自我调节学习是参与终身学习的关键能力。研究越来越多地承认,实习阶段的医学生需要他人来调节他们的学习。“共同调节学习”的概念捕捉到了通过与他人互动来调节自己学习的行为。为了有效地培养学生的这种技能,我们需要增加对共同调节学习的理解。本研究旨在确定不同临床培训阶段的学生与网络中的他人互动以调节学习的目的。
在这项社会网络研究中,我们向 403 名实习阶段的医学生(65.5%的回复率)发放了一份问卷。问卷探讨了学生共同调节网络的组成以及他们在特定自我调节学习活动中与他人互动的目的。我们计算了学生在每个调节活动中与他人互动的比例。此外,我们还进行了方差分析,以检验一年级、二年级和三年级学生在如何利用网络支持自我调节方面是否存在差异。
学生利用共同调节网络中的他人来支持一系列自我调节学习活动。学生与谁互动以及互动的目的似乎随着学生在临床培训中的进展而发生变化。随着时间的推移,学生与工作场所主管讨论学习目标、学习策略、自我反思和自我评估的比例增加,而与同伴讨论学习策略以及如何在工作场所实现学习目标的比例下降。在所测量的学生与他人互动的所有目的中,讨论自我反思和自我评估始终是最常提到的目的之一。
研究结果强化了这样一种观点,即医学生的学习调节是基于实习期间他们构建的共同调节网络中的社会互动。研究结果阐明了学生在共同调节网络中实施自我调节学习的程度,以及他们的共同调节学习行为如何随着时间的推移而发展。详细说明共同调节网络中的互动可能有助于学生和主管有目的地进行有意义的共同调节互动。此外,共同调节互动可能有助于学生在临床工作场所调节学习,并磨练他们的自我调节学习技能。