Social connections and social identity as a basis for learning and support: Experiences of medical students with minoritised and non-minoritised ethnic identities

IF 4.9 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Stephanie Bull, Rohini Terry, Neil Rice, Daniele Carrieri, Mark Tarrant, Gerens Curnow
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Social connections between medical students provide a key basis for learning and support. These connections, and associated social identity, may be patterned by ethnicity, and students often perform similarly academically to those they connect with. The mechanisms that underpin the formation of these connections and the role that they play are not fully understood. This study explored how medical students connect with each other, and the potential impact of this on their academic attainment and well-being, with a focus on students with minoritised ethnic identities.

Methods

A mixed methods study combining (1) a survey to establish the number and strength of connections formed by Years 1 and 2 medical students with both minoritised and non-minoritised ethnicities and (2) semi-structured interviews to understand how connections were formed, whether this was shaped by ethnicity and the role of connections in supporting students with their learning and well-being.

Results

One hundred fifty-one students (15.5% response rate) completed the survey. Students connected regularly with three to four peers with the goal of supporting learning and 71.9% of students reported a sense of social identification with this group. There was no statistical difference between ethnically minoritised and White students on either of these measures (t = 0.1, p = 0.92, χ2 = 2.9, p = 0.56). Interviews with 19 students found that social connections were shaped by perceptions of their self-identity and the need to find ‘equilibrium’ by forming relationships with compatible others. The education environment, including its ethnic diversity, impacted on the opportunities to make connections. Students who were ethnically minoritised reported encountering challenges, especially in the clinical environment, and described the burden of these for them.

Discussion

Curriculum designers should consider the time and space that is afforded to student interaction during course development, as finding compatible others with whom students can socially connect is important to balancing well-being with academic performance.

社会联系和社会认同是学习和支持的基础:具有少数民族和非少数民族身份的医科学生的经历。
背景:医学生之间的社会联系是学习和支持的重要基础。这些联系以及相关的社会认同可能以种族为模式,而学生的学业成绩往往与他们所联系的人相似。这些联系的形成机制及其所起的作用尚未完全明了。本研究探讨了医科学生如何相互联系,以及这种联系对其学业成绩和身心健康的潜在影响,重点关注具有少数民族身份的学生:这是一项混合方法研究,其中包括:(1)一项调查,以确定一年级和二年级少数族裔和非少数族裔医科学生建立联系的数量和强度;(2)半结构式访谈,以了解联系是如何形成的,是否受族裔影响,以及联系在支持学生学习和身心健康方面的作用:151 名学生(回复率为 15.5%)完成了调查。学生定期与三至四名同伴建立联系,目的是为学习提供支持,71.9%的学生表示对这一群体有社会认同感。少数族裔学生和白人学生在这些衡量标准上没有统计学差异(t = 0.1,p = 0.92,χ2 = 2.9,p = 0.56)。通过对 19 名学生的访谈发现,他们对自我身份的认识以及通过与相容的人建立关系来寻求 "平衡 "的需求,决定了他们的社会关系。教育环境,包括其种族多样性,影响了建立联系的机会。少数族裔学生报告了他们遇到的挑战,尤其是在临床环境中,并描述了这些挑战给他们带来的负担:讨论:课程设计者应在课程开发过程中考虑为学生互动提供的时间和空间,因为找到能与学生建立社会联系的合得来的人对于平衡幸福感和学业成绩非常重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Medical Education
Medical Education 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
279
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Education seeks to be the pre-eminent journal in the field of education for health care professionals, and publishes material of the highest quality, reflecting world wide or provocative issues and perspectives. The journal welcomes high quality papers on all aspects of health professional education including; -undergraduate education -postgraduate training -continuing professional development -interprofessional education
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