{"title":"November in this issue","authors":"","doi":"10.1111/medu.15547","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>This interview study of medical students, residents and fellows probes the language they use to talk about the—sometimes invisible, but still powerful—‘everyday’ ways they resist oppression and make change. These trainees narrate their resistance work as an almost physical pushing back against racism, sexism and homophobia; an embodied standing up to the status quo; and a verbal and cognitive bringing of these inequities to light for those being harmed. This study provides a window into the vital work of trainees; if you can see this work for what it is, you can step up and join it.</p><p>\n <span>Konopasky, A</span>, <span>Ma, T</span>, <span>Wyatt, T</span>. <span>Pushing, standing, and bringing to light: how medical trainees conceptualize professional resistance</span>. <i>Med Educ</i>. <span>2024</span>; <span>58</span>(<span>11</span>): <span>1343</span>-<span>1349</span>. 10.1111/medu.15400.</p><p>Translating HPER findings through the emotive and embodied nature of a verbatim theatre performance creates alternative learning spaces for rich and valuable insights that aligns with transformative pedagogy. The authors describe the experiential process of bringing an interdisciplinary team together to craft a verbatim theatre script from a qualitative data set on professionalism and sociocultural factors in health professions education (HPE). They share research and pedagogical insights, including key opportunities and challenges they encountered in translating HPER to support transformative pedagogy and practice in HPE.</p><p>\n <span>Brand, G</span>, <span>Peters, S</span>, <span>Dart, J</span>. <span>Verbatim theatre as a creative approach to health professions education research translation</span>. <i>Med Educ</i>. <span>2024</span>; <span>58</span>(<span>11</span>): <span>1296</span>-<span>1303</span>. 10.1111/medu.15449.</p><p>Since the release of ChatGPT, the advent of large language models has become an inexorable part of our society, fundamentally changing how we interact with technology, access information and approach education. This review critically analyses the implications of large language models in medical education, considering the benefits and limitations of ethical and practical implementation. Studies highlight LLMs theoretical potential and offer quantitative analyses, emphasising its value as a tool but not as a substitute for human expertise.</p><p>\n <span>Robinson, JR</span>, <span>Lucas, HC</span>, <span>Upperman, JS</span>. <span>A systematic review of large language models and their implications in medical education</span>. <i>Med Educ</i>. <span>2024</span>; <span>58</span>(<span>11</span>): <span>1276</span>-<span>1285</span>. 10.1111/medu.15402.</p><p>To be silenced, disbelieved or not taken seriously as a knower is both a deep source of distress and a form of dehumanisation. In this article, the authors unpack the philosophical concept of epistemic injustice and delineate its intended (and unintended) meaning. Using a worked example from their research on introversion and academic underperformance, they illustrate what it looks and feels like to experience this type of epistemic harm. Thinking with epistemic injustice in mind can help medical educators reframe complex and pervasive issues within this field.</p><p>\n <span>Luong, V</span>, <span>Ajjawi, R</span>, <span>Burm, S</span>, <span>Olson, R</span>, <span>MacLeod, A</span>. <span>Unraveling epistemic injustice in medical education: the case of the underperforming learner</span>. <i>Med Educ</i>. <span>2024</span>; <span>58</span>(<span>11</span>): <span>1286</span>-<span>1295</span>. 10.1111/medu.15410.</p>","PeriodicalId":18370,"journal":{"name":"Medical Education","volume":"58 11","pages":"1259"},"PeriodicalIF":4.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/medu.15547","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Education","FirstCategoryId":"95","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/medu.15547","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
This interview study of medical students, residents and fellows probes the language they use to talk about the—sometimes invisible, but still powerful—‘everyday’ ways they resist oppression and make change. These trainees narrate their resistance work as an almost physical pushing back against racism, sexism and homophobia; an embodied standing up to the status quo; and a verbal and cognitive bringing of these inequities to light for those being harmed. This study provides a window into the vital work of trainees; if you can see this work for what it is, you can step up and join it.
Konopasky, A, Ma, T, Wyatt, T. Pushing, standing, and bringing to light: how medical trainees conceptualize professional resistance. Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1343-1349. 10.1111/medu.15400.
Translating HPER findings through the emotive and embodied nature of a verbatim theatre performance creates alternative learning spaces for rich and valuable insights that aligns with transformative pedagogy. The authors describe the experiential process of bringing an interdisciplinary team together to craft a verbatim theatre script from a qualitative data set on professionalism and sociocultural factors in health professions education (HPE). They share research and pedagogical insights, including key opportunities and challenges they encountered in translating HPER to support transformative pedagogy and practice in HPE.
Brand, G, Peters, S, Dart, J. Verbatim theatre as a creative approach to health professions education research translation. Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1296-1303. 10.1111/medu.15449.
Since the release of ChatGPT, the advent of large language models has become an inexorable part of our society, fundamentally changing how we interact with technology, access information and approach education. This review critically analyses the implications of large language models in medical education, considering the benefits and limitations of ethical and practical implementation. Studies highlight LLMs theoretical potential and offer quantitative analyses, emphasising its value as a tool but not as a substitute for human expertise.
Robinson, JR, Lucas, HC, Upperman, JS. A systematic review of large language models and their implications in medical education. Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1276-1285. 10.1111/medu.15402.
To be silenced, disbelieved or not taken seriously as a knower is both a deep source of distress and a form of dehumanisation. In this article, the authors unpack the philosophical concept of epistemic injustice and delineate its intended (and unintended) meaning. Using a worked example from their research on introversion and academic underperformance, they illustrate what it looks and feels like to experience this type of epistemic harm. Thinking with epistemic injustice in mind can help medical educators reframe complex and pervasive issues within this field.
Luong, V, Ajjawi, R, Burm, S, Olson, R, MacLeod, A. Unraveling epistemic injustice in medical education: the case of the underperforming learner. Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1286-1295. 10.1111/medu.15410.
这项对医科学生、住院医师和研究员的访谈研究探究了他们在谈论自己抵制压迫和进行变革的 "日常 "方式时所使用的语言,这些方式有时是无形的,但仍然是强有力的。这些受训者将他们的反抗工作描述为对种族主义、性别歧视和仇视同性恋的近乎身体上的反击;对现状的身体力行;以及对那些受到伤害的人在语言和认知上揭露这些不平等现象。这项研究为了解受训人员的重要工作提供了一个窗口;如果你能看到这项工作的本质,你就能站出来加入其中。 Konopasky,A,Ma,T,Wyatt,T.《推动、站立和揭露:医学见习生如何看待职业反抗》。Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1343-1349.10.1111/medu.15400.Translating HPER findings through the emotionive and embodied nature of a verbatim theatre performance creates alternative learning spaces for rich and valuable insights that aligning with transformative pedagogy.通过逐字记录的戏剧表演的情感性和体现性来转化HPER的研究结果,为丰富而有价值的见解创造了另类的学习空间,这与变革教学法是一致的。作者描述了将一个跨学科团队聚集在一起,根据有关卫生专业教育(HPE)中的职业精神和社会文化因素的定性数据集制作逐字戏剧剧本的体验过程。他们分享了研究和教学方面的见解,包括在转化 HPER 以支持 HPE 的变革性教学法和实践过程中遇到的主要机遇和挑战。 Brand, G, Peters, S, Dart, J. Verbatim theatre as a creative approach to health professions education research translation.Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1296-1303.10.1111/medu.15449.自 ChatGPT 发布以来,大型语言模型的出现已成为我们社会不可阻挡的一部分,从根本上改变了我们与技术互动、获取信息和接受教育的方式。这篇综述批判性地分析了大型语言模型在医学教育中的影响,考虑了伦理和实际实施的好处和局限性。研究强调了大语言模型的理论潜力,并提供了定量分析,强调其作为工具的价值,但不能取代人类的专业知识。 Robinson, JR, Lucas, HC, Upperman, JS. 大型语言模型及其在医学教育中的意义的系统回顾。Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1276-1285.10.1111/medu.15402.To be silenced, disbelieved or not taken seriously as a knower is both a deep source of distress and a form of dehumanisation.在这篇文章中,作者解读了认识论不公正这一哲学概念,并阐述了其本意(和非本意)。他们以自己对内向性格和学习成绩不佳的研究为例,说明了这种认识论伤害的外观和感觉。从认识论不公正的角度进行思考,有助于医学教育工作者重新审视这一领域复杂而普遍的问题。 Luong, V, Ajjawi, R, Burm, S, Olson, R, MacLeod, A. Unraveling epistemic injustice in medical education: the case of the underperforming learner.Med Educ. 2024; 58(11): 1286-1295.10.1111/medu.15410.
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