Health Science Education and Social Accountability, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Centre for Health Science Education, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
BMC Med Educ. 2024 Jan 4;24(1):27. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-05001-w.
The discussion of access in medical education has its focus largely on physical and epistemological access, leaving a qualitative gap regarding sociocultural factors which enable access in this context. This study introduces and defines symbolic access, a concept with a specific lens on sociocultural inclusion, and the influence it has on student learning within the South African medical education landscape.
A phenomenographic design was used to explore students' conceptions of symbolic access and its impact on learning. One-on-one exploratory interviews were conducted with fifteen final year medical students at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. Interviews were analysed using Sjöström and Dahlgren's seven-step phenomenography model.
Four categories of description were induced, which described students' understanding of symbolic access, these were rejection, disregard, invalidation, and actualization. Four dimensions of variation were discovered expressing the diversity of events which informed the collectives' understanding of the phenomenon. These dimensions were; interactions with educators, peer relationships, educational environment, and race. Categories of description and dimensions of variation formed the Outcome Space, a visual representation of the student experience of symbolic access. The outcome space had a double narrative related to symbolic access; exclusion (major) and actualization (minor). Medical student's chief experience within the medical community was exclusion, however clinical immersion, meaningful participation, peer-relationships, and clinical skills lessons facilitated community enculturation, and impacted learning.
Despite deeply exclusionary experiences throughout their programme, medical students articulated a paradox of both awareness and no awareness of symbolic access. The awareness of symbolic access was predominantly influenced by clinical experiences and clinical immersion during the pre-clinical and clinical years of study. Further, descriptions of valuable learning experiences were connected to clinical events and the involvement with patient care. This study suggests that the actualization of symbolic access and description of meaningful learning experiences are linked. Medical educationalists should design undergraduate curricula with early clinical immersion at the fore and explore symbolic concepts pertaining to access, as they are linked to transformative learning experiences for the medical student.
医学教育中的讨论主要集中在物理和认识论上的可及性,而在这方面,关于使人们能够获得医学教育的社会文化因素则存在着明显的差距。本研究引入并定义了象征性进入,这是一个具有特定社会文化包容性视角的概念,以及它对南非医学教育环境中学生学习的影响。
采用现象学设计来探讨学生对象征性进入的概念及其对学习的影响。在约翰内斯堡威特沃特斯兰德大学,对 15 名即将毕业的医学生进行了一对一的探索性访谈。使用 Sjöström 和 Dahlgren 的七步现象学模型对访谈进行了分析。
得出了四个描述类别,描述了学生对象征性进入的理解,这四个类别分别是拒绝、忽视、无效和实现。发现了四个变化维度,表达了影响集体对这一现象理解的多样性事件。这些维度是:与教育者的互动、同伴关系、教育环境和种族。描述类别和变化维度构成了结果空间,这是学生体验象征性进入的一种直观表现。结果空间具有与象征性进入相关的双重叙述:排斥(主要)和实现(次要)。医学生在医疗社区中的主要经历是排斥,但临床沉浸、有意义的参与、同伴关系和临床技能课程促进了社区的文化融入,并对学习产生了影响。
尽管在整个学习过程中经历了深刻的排斥,但医学生对象征性进入的意识和无意识都有矛盾的认识。对象征性进入的意识主要受到临床经验和临床前和临床学习期间的临床沉浸的影响。此外,有价值的学习经验的描述与临床事件和参与患者护理有关。本研究表明,象征性进入的实现和有意义的学习经验的描述是相关的。医学教育工作者应该设计以早期临床沉浸为重点的本科课程,并探索与进入相关的象征性概念,因为它们与医学生的变革性学习经验有关。