Applying the Panarchy Framework to Examining Post-Pandemic Adaptation in the Undergraduate Medical Education Environment: A Qualitative Study.

IF 2.1 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Gowda Parameshwara Prashanth, Ciraj Ali Mohammed
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Phenomenon: The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated an abrupt shift to online medical education, disrupting learning across knowledge, skills, and social connections. Post-pandemic, medical schools must evaluate how these disruptions shaped student experiences to optimize the return to in-person learning. Approach: This cross-sectional qualitative study explored medical students' perceptions of their learning environment during the post-pandemic reintegration period in Oman. Fifty-four preclinical and clinical students participated in six focus group interviews. Content analysis identified key topics characterizing students' perceptions of change and change processes in the post-pandemic learning environment. The panarchy framework, developed to characterize complex adaptive systems in nature, was used to frame the results. Findings: The return to in-person environments presented a mix of renewed connectivity, involving collaborative benefits alongside transitional adjustment strains. Five major topics characterizing student perceptions of change and change processes in their post-pandemic learning environment were identified: learning skills, developing clinical competence, faculty interactions, physical atmosphere, and social connections. Managing academic schedules and cognitive load as the learning environment opened challenged students' learning skills. Learners valued a renewed opportunity for interactive application of knowledge through collaboration, patient contact, and empathy skill-building to feel prepared for future practice. Returning to in-person instruction renewed a sense of community and peer support networks disrupted by pandemic isolation. Some students continued to struggle with study-life imbalance and felt ill-equipped to handle post-pandemic demands. Improved access to student support and wellness services was emphasized to ease transitional stresses. Students defined an ideal learning climate as supportive, active, personalized, relevant, challenging, accessible, and collaborative. Insights: While pandemic disruptions posed challenges, they provide opportunities to strengthen the educational system's resilience moving forward. Our findings highlight an opportunity for medical educators and learners to capitalize on the innovations that emerged during this period, integrating technology with interactive learning activities and reconnecting students with the core values of the medical profession. Applying the panarchy framework to frame this adaptive process could enable the tracking of multi-level interactions within the medical education environment and the evaluation of interventions targeted at identified areas of concern. Further exploration to achieve complete mapping of specific environmental domains onto the panarchical cycles merits future investigation to build integrated resilience frameworks.

在本科医学教育环境中应用 "泛等级框架 "研究大流行后的适应性:定性研究。
现象:COVID-19 大流行导致医学教育突然转向在线教育,扰乱了知识、技能和社会关系方面的学习。疫情过后,医学院必须评估这些干扰如何影响学生的学习体验,以优化学生的在线学习。方法:这项横断面定性研究探讨了医学生在大流行后重返阿曼期间对学习环境的看法。54 名临床前和临床医学专业的学生参加了六次焦点小组访谈。内容分析确定了学生对大流行后学习环境中的变化和变化过程的看法的关键主题。为描述自然界中复杂的适应性系统而开发的 "泛结构 "框架被用来确定结果。研究结果:重新回到面对面的环境中,既有新的连通性,又有合作的益处,还有过渡调整的压力。研究确定了学生对大流行病后学习环境中的变化和变化过程的五大特点:学习技能、培养临床能力、教师互动、物质氛围和社会联系。随着学习环境的开放,学业安排和认知负荷的管理对学生的学习技能提出了挑战。通过合作、接触病人和培养移情技能,学员们重新感受到了互动应用知识的机会,从而为未来的实践做好了准备。重新回到面对面的教学中,重新找回了被大流行病隔离所破坏的社区感和同伴支持网络。一些学生继续在学习与生活的失衡中挣扎,感到没有能力应对大流行后的需求。为缓解过渡时期的压力,学生们强调要更好地利用学生支持和健康服务。学生们将理想的学习氛围定义为支持性的、积极的、个性化的、相关的、具有挑战性的、可获得的和协作性的。启示虽然大流行带来了挑战,但也为加强教育系统的复原力提供了机会。我们的研究结果强调,医学教育工作者和学习者有机会利用这一时期出现的创新,将技术与互动学习活动相结合,并重新将学生与医学专业的核心价值观联系在一起。应用泛结构框架来构建这一适应过程,可以跟踪医学教育环境中的多层次互动,并评估针对已确定的关切领域的干预措施。未来值得进一步探索,以便将特定环境领域完整映射到泛级循环中,从而建立综合复原力框架。
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来源期刊
Teaching and Learning in Medicine
Teaching and Learning in Medicine 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
12.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Teaching and Learning in Medicine ( TLM) is an international, forum for scholarship on teaching and learning in the health professions. Its international scope reflects the common challenge faced by all medical educators: fostering the development of capable, well-rounded, and continuous learners prepared to practice in a complex, high-stakes, and ever-changing clinical environment. TLM''s contributors and readership comprise behavioral scientists and health care practitioners, signaling the value of integrating diverse perspectives into a comprehensive understanding of learning and performance. The journal seeks to provide the theoretical foundations and practical analysis needed for effective educational decision making in such areas as admissions, instructional design and delivery, performance assessment, remediation, technology-assisted instruction, diversity management, and faculty development, among others. TLM''s scope includes all levels of medical education, from premedical to postgraduate and continuing medical education, with articles published in the following categories:
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