Clinical and Professional Practice, School of Clinical Medicine, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 4000, South Africa.
BMC Med Educ. 2024 Sep 28;24(1):1065. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-06084-9.
Medical students benefit from direct observation of clinical performance and timely feedback from multiple sources. While self and peer feedback have been the focus of numerous research studies, how they influence feedback engagement and receptivity in medical students of varying achievement levels in the clinical skills laboratory setting remains relatively unexplored.
We conducted an exploratory qualitative study to investigate students' engagement and receptivity to self and peer feedback across academic performance levels at a medical teaching institution. Data from five focus groups with third-year medical students(n = 25) were thematically analysed.
The ways in which low and high performing students engaged with self-assessment and peer feedback were divided into three categories: affective (or interpersonal), orientational, and transformational. Lower achievers believed they lacked the necessary skills to effectively engage in self and peer feedback interventions, but they agreed with higher achievers who recognized that peer feedback combined with prior knowledge of learning objectives allowed them to take ownership of monitoring their own development over time. Learners' emotional maturity in response to feedback ratings and feedback from activities testing clinical cognition had an impact on self-regulated learning.
Creating a trusting environment is critical for improving the acceptability of peer feedback. It is also critical to provide multiple opportunities for self-assessment in order to improve one's judgment. Giving learners the ability to actively seek and engage with feedback encourages participation in the feedback cycle, focusing on self-regulation rather than reliance on feedback providers. Feedback and action plan development can be improved by teaching students how to understand criticism, manage emotions constructively, and practice developing evaluative judgment and self-regulation skills. Based on the study findings an integrated three stage training model is recommended for effective self- and peer feedback practice for undergraduate medical education.
医学生从临床表现的直接观察和来自多个来源的及时反馈中受益。虽然自我反馈和同伴反馈一直是众多研究的焦点,但它们如何影响不同临床技能实验室环境中成就水平的医学生对反馈的参与和接受程度仍相对未知。
我们在一所医学教学机构进行了一项探索性的定性研究,以调查学生在学术表现水平上对自我和同伴反馈的参与度和接受度。对来自五个三年级医学生焦点小组(n=25)的数据进行了主题分析。
高低成就学生参与自我评估和同伴反馈的方式分为三类:情感(或人际关系)、定向和转型。成绩较低的学生认为自己缺乏有效参与自我和同伴反馈干预的必要技能,但他们同意成绩较高的学生的观点,即同伴反馈与学习目标的先验知识相结合,使他们能够随着时间的推移对自己的发展负责。学习者对反馈评分和测试临床认知活动的反馈的情感成熟度对自我调节学习有影响。
营造信任的环境对于提高同伴反馈的可接受性至关重要。提供多次自我评估的机会以提高自我判断能力也很重要。让学习者有能力主动寻求和参与反馈,鼓励他们参与反馈循环,关注自我调节,而不是依赖反馈提供者。通过教授学生如何理解批评、建设性地管理情绪以及练习发展评价判断和自我调节技能,可以改进反馈和行动计划的制定。基于研究结果,建议为本科医学教育实施有效的自我和同伴反馈实践提供一个综合的三阶段培训模型。