{"title":"September In This Issue","authors":"","doi":"10.1111/medu.15477","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><b>A meta-study analysing the Discourses of Discourse Analysis in health professions education</b></p><p>Discourse analysis has been used as an approach to conducting research in health professions education (HPE) for many years. However, because there is no one ‘right’ interpretation of or approach to it, quite what discourse analysis is, how it could/should be used, and how it can be appraised is unclear. This ambiguity risks undermining the trustworthiness and coherence of the methodology and any findings it produces. To address these issues, MacLeod, Ellaway and Cleland present a framework to facilitate transparent and complete reporting of discourse analysis research, to help readers assess the trustworthiness of the findings from such work.</p><p>MacLeod, A, Ellaway, R, Cleland, J. A meta-study analysing the Discourses of Discourse Analysis in health professions education. <i>Med Educ</i>. 2024;58(9): 1058-1070. doi: 10.1111/medu.15309.</p><p><b>“The faculty was really hearing what I had to say and really validating who I was”: Learning from Validation Theory to Support Students of Color in Undergraduate Medical Education</b></p><p>Verbal expressions of validation can be extremely beneficial to medical students of color, both at a personal level and to help address the larger, often harmful structural contexts of medical school. This article offers concrete and practical examples of ways faculty and clinical faculty can support medical students of color through six elements of Validation Theory. From focus group discussions at a US community-based medical school, students and faculty provided examples of validating experiences when students were made to feel recognized as whole individuals, felt increased self-worth, and had a sense of belonging through personal relationships with faculty.</p><p>Blalock AE, Ozdemir S, Garcia AJ, Lyons EG. “The faculty was really hearing what I had to say and really validating who I was”: Learning from Validation Theory to Support Students of Color in Undergraduate Medical Education. <i>Med Educ</i>. 2024;58(9): 1117-1125. doi: 10.1111/medu.15364.</p><p><b>Study demands and resources affect academic well-being and life satisfaction of undergraduate medical students in the Netherlands</b></p><p>Undergraduate medical students report poor academic well-being (high burnout and low engagement) and low life satisfaction in an educational context of high study demands (heavy workload). When combined with low study resources (limited growth opportunities), such contexts were associated with reduced academic well-being. Peer support buffered the negative impact of a heavy workload on academic burnout and, subsequently, life satisfaction. Therefore, medical schools should consider facilitating peer support and growth opportunities as well as reducing workload to support students' academic well-being and life satisfaction.</p><p>Scheepers, R, Hilverda, F, Vollmann, M. Study demands and resources affect academic well-being and life satisfaction of undergraduate medical students in the Netherlands. <i>Med Educ</i>. 2024;58(9): 1097-1106. doi: 10.1111/medu.15456.</p><p><b>Physicians' Lifelong Learning Journeys: A Narrative Analysis of Continuing Professional Development Struggles</b></p><p>Continuing professional development is crucial, yet learning in practice is challenging. This study uses physicians' narratives to better understand the lifelong learning journeys of physicians in a large hospital network. Three noteworthy challenges are presented that describe how physicians see learning as important but challenging due to a lack of support, other priorities, and engagement in learning that was available but not necessarily relevant. The conclusion highlights that learning is not fully supported by the CPD systems that are currently in place. To encourage meaningful learning, the complex interplay of factors impeding CPD engagement should inform future innovations.</p><p>Allen, L, Balmer, D, Varpio, L. Physicians' Lifelong Learning Journeys: A Narrative Analysis of Continuing Professional Development Struggles <i>Med Educ</i>. 2024;58(9): 1086-1096. doi: 10.1111/medu.15375.</p>","PeriodicalId":18370,"journal":{"name":"Medical Education","volume":"58 9","pages":"1013"},"PeriodicalIF":4.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/medu.15477","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Education","FirstCategoryId":"95","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/medu.15477","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"教育学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A meta-study analysing the Discourses of Discourse Analysis in health professions education
Discourse analysis has been used as an approach to conducting research in health professions education (HPE) for many years. However, because there is no one ‘right’ interpretation of or approach to it, quite what discourse analysis is, how it could/should be used, and how it can be appraised is unclear. This ambiguity risks undermining the trustworthiness and coherence of the methodology and any findings it produces. To address these issues, MacLeod, Ellaway and Cleland present a framework to facilitate transparent and complete reporting of discourse analysis research, to help readers assess the trustworthiness of the findings from such work.
MacLeod, A, Ellaway, R, Cleland, J. A meta-study analysing the Discourses of Discourse Analysis in health professions education. Med Educ. 2024;58(9): 1058-1070. doi: 10.1111/medu.15309.
“The faculty was really hearing what I had to say and really validating who I was”: Learning from Validation Theory to Support Students of Color in Undergraduate Medical Education
Verbal expressions of validation can be extremely beneficial to medical students of color, both at a personal level and to help address the larger, often harmful structural contexts of medical school. This article offers concrete and practical examples of ways faculty and clinical faculty can support medical students of color through six elements of Validation Theory. From focus group discussions at a US community-based medical school, students and faculty provided examples of validating experiences when students were made to feel recognized as whole individuals, felt increased self-worth, and had a sense of belonging through personal relationships with faculty.
Blalock AE, Ozdemir S, Garcia AJ, Lyons EG. “The faculty was really hearing what I had to say and really validating who I was”: Learning from Validation Theory to Support Students of Color in Undergraduate Medical Education. Med Educ. 2024;58(9): 1117-1125. doi: 10.1111/medu.15364.
Study demands and resources affect academic well-being and life satisfaction of undergraduate medical students in the Netherlands
Undergraduate medical students report poor academic well-being (high burnout and low engagement) and low life satisfaction in an educational context of high study demands (heavy workload). When combined with low study resources (limited growth opportunities), such contexts were associated with reduced academic well-being. Peer support buffered the negative impact of a heavy workload on academic burnout and, subsequently, life satisfaction. Therefore, medical schools should consider facilitating peer support and growth opportunities as well as reducing workload to support students' academic well-being and life satisfaction.
Scheepers, R, Hilverda, F, Vollmann, M. Study demands and resources affect academic well-being and life satisfaction of undergraduate medical students in the Netherlands. Med Educ. 2024;58(9): 1097-1106. doi: 10.1111/medu.15456.
Physicians' Lifelong Learning Journeys: A Narrative Analysis of Continuing Professional Development Struggles
Continuing professional development is crucial, yet learning in practice is challenging. This study uses physicians' narratives to better understand the lifelong learning journeys of physicians in a large hospital network. Three noteworthy challenges are presented that describe how physicians see learning as important but challenging due to a lack of support, other priorities, and engagement in learning that was available but not necessarily relevant. The conclusion highlights that learning is not fully supported by the CPD systems that are currently in place. To encourage meaningful learning, the complex interplay of factors impeding CPD engagement should inform future innovations.
Allen, L, Balmer, D, Varpio, L. Physicians' Lifelong Learning Journeys: A Narrative Analysis of Continuing Professional Development Struggles Med Educ. 2024;58(9): 1086-1096. doi: 10.1111/medu.15375.
多年来,话语分析一直被用作开展健康职业教育(HPE)研究的一种方法。然而,由于对其没有一种 "正确 "的解释或方法,话语分析究竟是什么、可以/应该如何使用以及如何对其进行评估都不明确。这种模棱两可的情况有可能会损害该方法的可信度和连贯性,以及它所得出的任何结论。MacLeod, A, Ellaway, R, Cleland, J. A meta-study analysing the Discourses of Discourse Analysis in Health Professions Education.Med Educ:1058-1070.DOI:10.1111/medu.15309. "教职员工真正听到了我要说的话,真正认可了我的身份":从验证理论中学习,在本科医学教育中为有色人种学生提供支持验证的口头表达对有色人种医学生非常有益,不仅在个人层面,而且有助于解决医学院更大的、往往是有害的结构性问题。本文提供了一些具体而实用的例子,说明教师和临床教师可以通过验证理论的六个要素为有色人种医学生提供支持。在美国一所社区医学院的焦点小组讨论中,学生和教职员工提供了一些验证经验的例子,当学生通过与教职员工的个人关系,感觉到自己作为完整的个体得到了认可,感觉到自我价值得到了提升,并有了归属感。"教职员工真正倾听了我的心声,并真正认可了我的身份":从验证理论中学习如何在本科医学教育中支持有色人种学生》(Learning from Validation Theory to Support Students of Color in Undergraduate Medical Education.Med Educ. 2024;58(9):1117-1125.DOI:10.1111/medu.15364.学习要求和资源影响荷兰医科本科生的学习幸福感和生活满意度医科本科生在高学习要求(繁重的工作量)的教育背景下,报告了较差的学习幸福感(高倦怠感和低参与度)和较低的生活满意度。如果再加上学习资源少(成长机会有限),这种情况就会导致学习幸福感降低。同伴支持可以缓冲繁重的工作量对学业倦怠以及生活满意度的负面影响。Scheepers, R, Hilverda, F, Vollmann, M. Study demands and resources affect academic well-being and life satisfaction of undergraduate medical students in the Netherlands.Med Educ:1097-1106.DOI:10.1111/medu.15456.Physicians' Lifelong Learning Journeys:持续专业发展至关重要,但实践中的学习却充满挑战。本研究通过医生的叙述来更好地了解一家大型医院网络中医生的终身学习历程。研究提出了三个值得注意的挑战,描述了医生如何看待学习的重要性,但由于缺乏支持、其他优先事项以及参与可获得但不一定相关的学习而面临挑战。结论强调,学习并没有得到现有继续医学发展系统的充分支持。Allen, L, Balmer, D, Varpio, L. Physicians' Lifelong Learning Journeys:医学教育》,2024;58(9):doi: 10.1111/medu.15375.
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