What the hell is water? Changing medical education's ideology through validity

IF 4.9 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Benjamin Kinnear, Daniel J. Schumacher
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Assumptions that are baked into our worldviews can keep us from questioning what may be noticeable or unusual to outsiders or novices.</p><p>In this issue of <i>Medical Education</i>, Coyle et al challenge us to examine the waters in which we swim.<span><sup>2</sup></span> They note that efforts to improve widening participation and access to medicine for people from under-privileged or minoritised backgrounds are at tension with medical education's preoccupation with academic excellence as a key metric for applicant selection. The authors poignantly write, ‘We suggest that it is time for medical schools to acknowledge that some of the drivers for ever higher academic thresholds for entry to medicine are artifacts of managing the number of applicants rather than anything more noble’. Such a bold call should rouse medical education to scrutinise the entrenched use of academic excellence as a selection standard by re-examining the rationale for doing so.</p><p>Academic performance has ruled medical education selection for decades, embedding itself as an ideological norm. We no longer question <i>why</i> it is used in applicant selection. It has become part of medical education's <i>ideology</i>, often passing ‘unseen as normal or as factual’<span><sup>3</sup></span> like water to our parabolic fish. However, the suboptimal diversity, equity and inclusion of medical education's assessment and selection practices are being increasingly recognised as a wicked problem,<span><sup>4</sup></span> leading to more frequent scrutiny of sacred (or unseen) ideologies. In response, we believe medical education should consider removing academic excellence as the gatekeeping metric to our profession.</p><p>Ostensibly, the most important stakeholders of applicant selection are learners and patients. For learners, selection represents the culmination of years of study, service and research. Selection presents a high-stakes branchpoint that dictates much of learners' future career. For patients, selection represents an accountability mechanism to ensure that future physicians are prepared for the rigours of medical training and capable of providing high-quality care. We should, then, question if relying on academic excellence serves these groups. Coyle et al's work suggests that academic excellence presents a roadblock for learners from under-privileged or minoritised backgrounds who are unfairly disadvantaged due to systematic bias. This unfairness certainly harms such learners, indicating that academic excellence is not beneficial to one of our key stakeholder groups. Patients are also harmed. Multiple studies have shown that perceived care quality and improved clinical outcomes are associated with patient–physician racial concordance for minoritised populations.<span><sup>5-7</sup></span> Therefore, admitting diverse training cohorts best positions the health professions to serve diverse patient populations. While the reduction of physician workforce diversity due to biased selection metrics (such as academic excellence) is just one factor contributing to widespread racial and ethnic healthcare disparities,<span><sup>8</sup></span> it is a factor that is within medical education's sphere of control. As Varpio wrote, ‘Fortunately, ideology is maintained by our decisions and actions; therefore, we can change our decisions and thereby modify the ideology to work for us, not against us’. In other words, we choose the waters in which we swim, and we have agency to change.</p><p>One way to modify our ideology is to consider diversity and equity as part of validity arguments for selection decisions. Medical education has largely adopted that validity is not a property of a specific instrument or tool, but rather an argument with supporting evidence that a given decision, interpretation or use of data is justifiable or defensible.<span><sup>9, 10</sup></span> One type of evidence that is often overlooked<span><sup>11</sup></span> but critical to validity arguments relates to the consequences of decisions. Consequences evidence ‘looks at the impact, beneficial or harmful and intended or unintended, of assessment’.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Coyle et al show how academic excellence works against diversity and equity policies and initiatives. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In 2005, American novelist David Foster Wallace gave a commencement speech to the graduating class at Kenyon College in the United States. He opened the speech with a parable about two fish:

Of course, the wisdom in this story is that the ideologies that constitute our realities are often transparent to us, but may not be to others. Assumptions that are baked into our worldviews can keep us from questioning what may be noticeable or unusual to outsiders or novices.

In this issue of Medical Education, Coyle et al challenge us to examine the waters in which we swim.2 They note that efforts to improve widening participation and access to medicine for people from under-privileged or minoritised backgrounds are at tension with medical education's preoccupation with academic excellence as a key metric for applicant selection. The authors poignantly write, ‘We suggest that it is time for medical schools to acknowledge that some of the drivers for ever higher academic thresholds for entry to medicine are artifacts of managing the number of applicants rather than anything more noble’. Such a bold call should rouse medical education to scrutinise the entrenched use of academic excellence as a selection standard by re-examining the rationale for doing so.

Academic performance has ruled medical education selection for decades, embedding itself as an ideological norm. We no longer question why it is used in applicant selection. It has become part of medical education's ideology, often passing ‘unseen as normal or as factual’3 like water to our parabolic fish. However, the suboptimal diversity, equity and inclusion of medical education's assessment and selection practices are being increasingly recognised as a wicked problem,4 leading to more frequent scrutiny of sacred (or unseen) ideologies. In response, we believe medical education should consider removing academic excellence as the gatekeeping metric to our profession.

Ostensibly, the most important stakeholders of applicant selection are learners and patients. For learners, selection represents the culmination of years of study, service and research. Selection presents a high-stakes branchpoint that dictates much of learners' future career. For patients, selection represents an accountability mechanism to ensure that future physicians are prepared for the rigours of medical training and capable of providing high-quality care. We should, then, question if relying on academic excellence serves these groups. Coyle et al's work suggests that academic excellence presents a roadblock for learners from under-privileged or minoritised backgrounds who are unfairly disadvantaged due to systematic bias. This unfairness certainly harms such learners, indicating that academic excellence is not beneficial to one of our key stakeholder groups. Patients are also harmed. Multiple studies have shown that perceived care quality and improved clinical outcomes are associated with patient–physician racial concordance for minoritised populations.5-7 Therefore, admitting diverse training cohorts best positions the health professions to serve diverse patient populations. While the reduction of physician workforce diversity due to biased selection metrics (such as academic excellence) is just one factor contributing to widespread racial and ethnic healthcare disparities,8 it is a factor that is within medical education's sphere of control. As Varpio wrote, ‘Fortunately, ideology is maintained by our decisions and actions; therefore, we can change our decisions and thereby modify the ideology to work for us, not against us’. In other words, we choose the waters in which we swim, and we have agency to change.

One way to modify our ideology is to consider diversity and equity as part of validity arguments for selection decisions. Medical education has largely adopted that validity is not a property of a specific instrument or tool, but rather an argument with supporting evidence that a given decision, interpretation or use of data is justifiable or defensible.9, 10 One type of evidence that is often overlooked11 but critical to validity arguments relates to the consequences of decisions. Consequences evidence ‘looks at the impact, beneficial or harmful and intended or unintended, of assessment’.12 Coyle et al show how academic excellence works against diversity and equity policies and initiatives. If the inequitable treatment of under-privileged and minoritised learners or the negative downstream consequences to patients are unacceptable (as they should be), then selection decisions that centre on academic excellence are not valid. Hauer et al have previously argued that diversity and equity considerations should be included in medical education assessment validity arguments.13 We agree and believe that the same considerations should be extended selection decisions.

To be clear, we are not arguing that learners from under-privileged or minoritised backgrounds are not excellent. Rather, we believe that the societal and systemic inequities and biased assessment strategies make academic performance an indefensible metric to use as the crux of selection for physician training. Selection decisions relying primarily on academic excellence are not valid if diversity and equity become key aspects of our validity arguments. We are also not implying that toppling academic excellence is an easy task. Changing medical education's ideology can seem daunting, but we must remember that it is within our control. We are actors in this network, with agency to swim to new ideological waters that embrace selection metrics which are more beneficial for both learners and patients. But first we must ask the fraught question, ‘What the hell is water?’

Benjamin Kinnear: Conceptualization; writing—original draft preparation; writing—review and editing. Daniel J. Schumacher: Conceptualization; writing—original draft preparation; writing—review and editing.

水到底是什么?通过有效性改变医学教育的意识形态。
2005 年,美国小说家大卫-福斯特-华莱士在美国凯尼恩学院毕业典礼上发表演讲。他以一个关于两条鱼的寓言作为开场白:当然,这个故事的智慧在于,构成我们现实生活的意识形态对我们来说往往是透明的,但对其他人来说却未必如此。在本期《医学教育》(Medical Education)杂志上,科伊尔(Coyle)等人向我们提出了挑战,要求我们审视自己所处的水域。2 他们指出,医学教育一味追求学术卓越,并将其作为选择申请人的关键指标,这与医学教育在努力扩大贫困或少数民族背景人群的参与度和就医机会方面存在矛盾。作者痛心疾首地写道:"我们建议,医学院校现在应该承认,不断提高医学入学学术门槛的一些驱动因素是管理申请人数的产物,而不是什么更高尚的东西"。这种大胆的呼吁应该促使医学教育机构重新审视将学术优异作为选拔标准这一根深蒂固的做法,并重新审视这样做的理由。"几十年来,学术成绩一直主导着医学教育的选拔,并已成为一种意识形态规范。几十年来,学业成绩一直主导着医学教育的选拔,已成为一种意识形态规范。它已成为医学教育意识形态的一部分,经常被 "视为正常或事实 "3 ,就像我们抛物线上的鱼儿喝水一样。然而,人们越来越认识到,医学教育的评估和遴选实践在多样性、公平性和包容性方面不尽如人意,是一个棘手的问题4 ,导致对神圣的(或看不见的)意识形态进行更频繁的审查。作为回应,我们认为医学教育应考虑取消将学术卓越性作为我们专业的把关标准。从表面上看,申请人遴选最重要的利益相关者是学习者和患者。对于学习者来说,选拔代表着多年学习、服务和研究的顶点。遴选是一个高风险的分支点,决定了学习者未来职业生涯的大部分。对患者而言,遴选是一种问责机制,可确保未来的医生做好了接受严格医学培训的准备,并有能力提供高质量的医疗服务。因此,我们应该质疑,依赖卓越的学术成就是否有利于这些群体。科伊尔等人的研究表明,对于来自贫困或少数民族背景的学习者来说,学业优秀是一个障碍,因为系统性的偏见使他们处于不公平的不利地位。这种不公平肯定会对这些学习者造成伤害,说明卓越的学术成就对我们的主要利益相关群体之一并无益处。病人也受到伤害。多项研究表明,对少数群体而言,医疗质量的感知和临床效果的改善与病人-医生的种族一致性相关。虽然有偏见的选拔指标(如学术卓越性)导致医生队伍的多样性减少只是造成广泛的种族和民族医疗差距的一个因素,8 但这也是医学教育可以控制的一个因素。正如瓦尔皮奥写道:"幸运的是,意识形态是由我们的决定和行动来维持的;因此,我们可以改变我们的决定,从而改变意识形态,使其有利于我们,而不是反对我们。换句话说,我们选择了我们游泳的水域,我们有能力改变。"改变意识形态的一种方法是将多样性和公平性作为选拔决策有效性论证的一部分。医学教育在很大程度上认为,有效性并不是某一特定工具或手段的属性,而是一种论据,并附有支持性证据,证明某项决策、数据的解释或使用是合理的或站得住脚的。9, 10 一种经常被忽视11 但对有效性论据至关重要的证据与决策的后果有关。12 Coyle 等人展示了卓越学术如何与多元化和公平政策及倡议背道而驰。12 Coyle 等人展示了卓越的学术成就是如何与多元化和公平政策及倡议背道而驰的。如果对弱势和少数群体学习者的不公平待遇或对患者造成的负面下游影响是不可接受的(也应该是不可接受的),那么以卓越学术成就为核心的选拔决定就是无效的。豪尔(Hauer)等人曾提出,医学教育评估有效性的论据中应包括多样性和公平性的考虑因素。13 我们同意这一观点,并认为同样的考虑因素也应适用于遴选决策。
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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