H.C. Chen is senior associate dean of assessment and educational scholarship and professor of pediatrics, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC.
K. Brown is associate director of teaching and learning resources and career development, vice chair for education, and associate professor of anatomy and cell biology, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC.
Acad Med. 2023 Nov 1;98(11S):S42-S49. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000005356. Epub 2023 Aug 3.
Unauthorized collaboration among medical students, including the unauthorized provision of assistance and sharing of curricular and assessment materials, is a reported problem. While many faculty view such sharing as academic dishonesty, students do not always perceive these behaviors as problematic. With the trend toward more small-group and team-based learning and the proliferation of resource-sharing and online study aids, collaboration and sharing may have become a student norm. This multi-institutional, qualitative study examined faculty and student perceptions of and student motivations for unauthorized collaboration.
Using a constructivist approach, the authors conducted scenario-prompted semistructured interviews with faculty and students in the preclinical curriculum. Participants were asked to reflect on scenarios of unauthorized collaboration and discuss their perceptions of student motivation and the influence of personal or environmental factors. The authors performed inductive thematic analysis of the interview transcripts using open and axial coding followed by abstraction and synthesis of themes.
Twenty-one faculty and 16 students across 3 institutions were interviewed in 2021. There was variation in perceptions among faculty and among students, but little variation between faculty and students. Both participant groups identified the same 3 areas of tension/themes: faculty/curriculum goals vs student goals, inherent character traits vs modifiable behavioral states, and student relationships with their peer group vs their relationships with the medical education system. Student behaviors were perceived to be influenced by their environment and motivated by the desire to help peers. Participants suggested cultivating trust between students and the education system, environmental interventions, and educating students about acceptable and unacceptable behaviors to prevent unauthorized collaboration.
Given the various tensions and positive motivations behind unauthorized collaborations, institutions should consider explicitly preparing students to make thoughtful decisions when faced with competing priorities in addition to developing mitigation strategies that address the environment and its interactions with students.
医学生之间未经授权的合作,包括未经授权的提供帮助以及共享课程和评估材料,这是一个被报道的问题。虽然许多教师认为这种共享是学术不诚实的行为,但学生并不总是认为这些行为有问题。随着小组学习和团队学习的趋势增多,以及资源共享和在线学习辅助工具的普及,合作和共享可能已经成为学生的规范。这项多机构的定性研究考察了教师和学生对未经授权的合作的看法以及学生合作的动机。
使用建构主义方法,作者对基础医学课程中的教师和学生进行了情景提示的半结构化访谈。要求参与者思考未经授权的合作情景,并讨论他们对学生动机的看法以及个人或环境因素的影响。作者对访谈记录进行了归纳主题分析,采用开放式和轴向编码,然后进行主题的抽象和综合。
2021 年,在 3 所机构中对 21 名教师和 16 名学生进行了访谈。教师和学生之间的看法存在差异,但教师和学生之间的差异很小。两组参与者都确定了 3 个紧张局势/主题:教师/课程目标与学生目标、内在性格特征与可修改的行为状态以及学生与同伴群体的关系与他们与医学教育系统的关系。学生的行为被认为受到环境的影响,并受到帮助同伴的愿望的激励。参与者建议在学生和教育系统之间建立信任,进行环境干预,并教育学生了解可接受和不可接受的行为,以防止未经授权的合作。
鉴于未经授权的合作背后存在各种紧张局势和积极的动机,除了制定解决环境及其与学生相互作用的缓解策略外,各机构还应考虑明确培养学生在面对竞争优先事项时做出深思熟虑的决策的能力。