LaDonna Kori A, Cameron Paula J, Geringer Jamie Lynn, MacLeod Anna, Merkebu Jerusalem
Department of Innovation in Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Continuing Professional Development & Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Clin Teach. 2025 Aug;22(4):e70124. doi: 10.1111/tct.70124.
This paper is the third in a series that qualitatively explores sensitive topics in health professions education (HPE). Here, our purpose is to consider how researchers' topical, methodological, and theoretical design choices create myriad up and downstream effects impacting study processes, outcomes, and - ultimately - implications for practice. Specifically, this paper uses the Sliding Doors metaphor as a thought exercise to consider alternate research paths for Geringer and colleagues' exploration of the imposter phenomenon (Paper 2), contemplating the what ifs had authors used a different methodology, incorporated other theoretical lenses, or chose to focus their exploration of self-assessment from an entirely different vantage point. By imagining how design decisions at critical junctures of the research journey simultaneously open and close doors to different ways of understanding, we aim to both highlight the richness and complexity of qualitative inquiry, and inspire researchers to consider the multiple pathways available for exploring sensitive topics in ways that are rigorous, creative, and ethically sound.
本文是定性探索卫生专业教育(HPE)中敏感话题系列文章的第三篇。在此,我们的目的是思考研究人员在主题、方法和理论设计上的选择如何产生无数的上下游效应,影响研究过程、结果,并最终影响实践意义。具体而言,本文使用“滑动门”隐喻作为一种思维练习,来思考对于格林格及其同事对冒名顶替现象的探索(第二篇论文)的其他研究路径,设想如果作者采用不同的方法、纳入其他理论视角,或者选择从完全不同的角度聚焦于自我评估探索会怎样。通过想象在研究过程的关键节点上设计决策如何同时为不同的理解方式打开和关闭大门,我们旨在既突出定性探究的丰富性和复杂性,又激励研究人员考虑以严谨、创造性和符合伦理的方式探索敏感话题的多种途径。