宝贵的基础工作:利用硕士研究项目为学术交流做出贡献。

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Lorelei Lingard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的 30 年里,卫生专业教育硕士课程(MHPE)呈指数级增长,全球从 7 个增至 150 个1, 2 。那么,硕士研究项目的论文都发表在哪里呢?做一个简单而保守的计算:如果这150个MHPE项目中,每个项目每年有10名学生毕业,其中有一半选择了研究项目而非单纯的课程,那么每年就有750个MHPE原创研究项目。HPE学术对话应该充满这些研究项目的知识。这个问题并不是 HPE 所独有的,对论文发表的研究具有相关性和启发性(特别是在缺乏 MHPE 经验数据的情况下)。克罗地亚的一项研究报告称,只有 14% 的医生硕士论文得以发表3 ;法国的一项研究发现,见习医学生论文的发表率为 17%4;对家庭医学硕士和博士论文发表情况的研究报告称,发表率为 21.6%;芬兰对医学文凭论文的研究报告称,发表率为 23.8%5;对 10 届荷兰医学生必修研究项目发表率的评估报告称,发表率为 27.7%。显然,绝大多数论文式的研究项目对学术知识没有贡献。我们这些指导硕士项目的人都有切身体会,很多项目都没有提交发表,而发表的项目也很少被接受。这是否意味着硕士研究项目在研究生课程要求之外没有任何作用?这篇 "如何...... "论文提供了三种策略,让您充分利用硕士研究项目的坚实基础,为 HPE 的知识和您自身的持续学术发展做出贡献。如果您精心设计了该项目以达到硕士目的,那么顾名思义,它将是有限的。它将是一个小样本,或者是一个不完美的设计,或者是一个初步分析--它将是对你正在啃咬的任何复杂问题的一个非常片面的看法。因此,它无法令人信服地回答研究问题。但是,它或许能为如何更准确地提出研究问题提供有意义的见解。例如,最近一项关于爱尔兰产科受训者在得知噩耗后的生活经历的研究将其目标定为探索性研究,其结论是 "提出了问题",而不是提供答案。与其在期刊投稿类别 "原创研究 "中提交您的工作(并因其大师级的范围而受到诸多限制的强烈批评),不如考虑将您的工作故事写成一篇 "洞察 "文章7 、一篇 "真正的好东西 "或 "当我说...... "8 或一篇 "学术视角 "9 。10、11 图 1 提供了一个假想的例子。可以说,大多数硕士(和其他小规模)研究项目从未发表过,因为它们一开始就没有投稿。找到一个合适的地方,提交您的作品供同行评审。同行评审的反馈意见会指出您研究的优缺点,而这些优缺点可能与您的预期不同。例如,你可能会担心样本量太小,但同行评议者更多的是纠结于你选择的理论框架。即使您的论文被退回(即编辑决定不将您的作品送交同行评审),您仍然可以获得有价值的见解。我们最近提交了一份由一名医学生完成的暑期项目。这是一项小规模的工作,利用的是现有的数据集,但分析的理论角度独特,似乎值得单独报道。我们的论文被编辑部拒绝了--无论你多么有经验,都会感到痛苦!但编辑提出了一些有益的意见和问题。其中有些问题我们无法解决:比如,学生没有能力更新数据集。但有些问题,比如澄清我们在分析过程中如何使用理论,我们可以用来加强重新提交的文章。在硕士阶段,您只专注于一个项目,您需要完成它,这是正确的!不过,既然项目已经完成,它作为更大的学术工作计划中的第一步也是有价值的。即使您还没有发表这个项目的成果,也要努力阐明您学到了什么。 您是否意识到自己对问题的理解不够充分?您是否深入了解了如何招募繁忙的从业人员样本?你是否获得了如何跨学科工作的经验?你是否为获得良好的访谈数据而努力,并在这一过程中发展了新的提问技巧,以揭开参与者的 "幌子"?所有这些经验教训都可以用来加强你下一步的研究。您的小型硕士项目就像试验数据:它为各种方法、伦理和理论问题提供了理论依据和理由。你能感受到价值的转变吗?与其为已完成的范围狭窄的项目道歉,你现在拥有的是宝贵的(也许是新颖的)基础工作的试验数据。试验性数据通常是描述性的,不需要同等力度的证据。图 2 提供了具体的例子。正如这些统计数据所示,发表小型研究项目的成果可能是一项挑战。但这并非不可能,也不应成为您的唯一目标。如果您确实希望发表论文,您可能需要对经验性手稿的预期 "故事 "进行关键性调整。在设定一个需要回答的问题时,请三思而行--您可能无法满足这种期望。相反,您可以设定一个需要提出、完善、澄清和重新考虑的问题:您可以从您的小项目开始做起。将作品提交同行评审:在尝试之前,不要认为发表是不可能的。您将收到宝贵的反馈意见,并在重新提交时加以利用。即使这次无法发表,您的硕士项目也可以为您下一次撰写提案或拨款提供参考。作为试点数据,这个小项目将成为您投资的证据,并支持您的设计决策,为您正在开展的研究计划提供更有力的支持:作者无利益冲突需要披露。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Valuable groundwork: Using your Master's research project to contribute to a scholarly conversation

Valuable groundwork: Using your Master's research project to contribute to a scholarly conversation

In the past 30 years, Master-level programmes in health professions education (MHPE) have grown exponentially, from 7 to 150 worldwide.1, 2 Many of these programmes share a common requirement to conduct original research; some also require its publication in a peer-reviewed journal. So where are all the publications from Master's research project? Doing some quick, conservative math: if each of those 150 MHPE programmes graduates 10 students a year, and half of those have opted for a research rather than coursework-only stream, that is 750 original MHPE research projects annually. HPE scholarly conversations should be full of knowledge from these research projects. But they are not.

The problem is not unique to HPE, and studies of thesis publication are relevant and revealing (particularly in the absence of empirical data in the MHPE context). A Croatian study reported that only 14% of Master's theses by medical doctors were published3; a French study found a 17% publication rate of medical trainee theses4; a study of publication output from Master's and doctoral theses in family medicine reported a 21.6% publication rate; a Finnish study of medical diploma theses reported a 23.8% publication rate5; and an assessment of publication rates of mandatory research projects from 10 cohorts of Dutch medical students reported a 27.7% publication rate. Clearly, the vast majority of thesis-style research projects are not contributing to scholarly knowledge.

Why not? Those of us who supervise Master's projects know firsthand that many are not submitted for publication, and few of those that are will be accepted. Does that mean that Master's level research projects serve no purpose outside the graduate programme requirement? No. This ‘How to …’ paper offers three strategies to capitalise on the solid groundwork of your Master's research project and contribute to both HPE's knowledge and your own continued scholarly development.

Your Master's project was a learning exercise: you learned how to think like a researcher by conducting a small piece of scholarly work. And if you designed it well to serve the Master's purpose, then it will be, by definition, limited. It will have a small sample, or an imperfect design, or a preliminary analysis—it will be a very partial view of whatever complex problem you were nibbling away at. Therefore, it is not going to be able to convincingly answer a research question. But it may be able to provide meaningful insights about how to ask a research question more precisely. For instance, a recent study of Irish obstetrics trainees' lived experiences of breaking bad news framed its aim as exploratory, and its conclusions ‘raised questions’ rather than offering answers.6

Understanding this distinction between a paper that answers and a paper that asks can help you choose an appropriate article type. Instead of submitting your work in the journal submission category of Original Research (and receiving robust criticisms of the many limitations given its Masters scope), consider writing up the story of your work as an Insight article,7 a ‘Really Good Stuff’ or ‘When I Say …’ piece8 or a Scholarly Perspective9 piece. Keep an eye on such sections in the journals you read for nice examples you can use as a model.10, 11

Figure 1 offers a hypothetical example.

Arguably, most Master's (and other small-scale) research projects never get published because they never get submitted in the first place. Find a venue that seems to fit, and submit your work for peer review. Peer review feedback will point out your study's strengths and weaknesses, and they may be different than you anticipated. For instance, you may be concerned about your small sample size, but peer reviewers struggled more with your choice of theoretical framing. Even if you are desk-rejected (that is, the Editor decides not to send your work out for peer review), you can still receive valuable insights. We recently submitted a piece of work done by a medical student as a summer project. It was a small-scale work, leveraging an existing data set, but with a unique theoretical angle to the analysis that seemed worthy of its own story. We were desk-rejected—which stings no matter how experienced you are! But the editor provided helpful comments and questions. Some of them we cannot address: for instance, the student does not have the capacity to update the data set. But some, such as clarifying how we used theory in the analytical process, we can use to strengthen the piece for resubmission.

At the Master's level, you were narrowly focused on a single project. And rightly so—you needed to get it done! Now that it is completed, though, it also holds value as a small first step in a larger programme of scholarly work. Even if you have not published from the project, try to articulate what you have learned. Did you realise that the way you conceptualised the problem was insufficient? Did you gain insight into how to recruit a busy sample of practitioners? Did you get experience in how to work across disciplinary boundaries? Did you struggle to get good interview data and, in the process, develop new skills in asking questions that get beneath participants' cover story? Any and all such lessons can be used to strengthen the next study you embark on.

Use these lessons strategically and explicitly as groundwork for your next proposal or grant. Your small Master's project is like pilot data: it provides rationale and justification for a variety of methodological, ethical and theoretical issues. Can you feel the shift in value? Rather than apologising for a completed project that was narrow in scope, you are now in possession of pilot data from valuable (and perhaps novel) groundwork. Pilot data is often descriptive and does not require the same strength of evidence. Figure 2 offers concrete examples.

As the statistics illustrate, publishing from your small research project could be a challenge. But it is not impossible, and it should not be your only goal. If you do hope to publish, you may need to make a critical shift in the expected ‘story’ of an empirical manuscript. Think twice about setting up a question that needs to be answered—you may not be able to satisfy that expectation. Instead, set up a question that needs to be asked, refined, clarified and reconsidered: that you can begin to do with your small project. Submit your work for peer review: do not assume publication is impossible before you try. You will receive valuable feedback that can be leveraged for resubmission. And even if publication is out of reach this time, your Master's project can inform the next proposal or grant you write. As pilot data, that small project becomes evidence of your investment and support for your design decisions, strengthening the case for your unfolding research programme.

Lorelei Lingard: Conceptualization; writing—original draft.

The authors have no conflict of interest to disclose.

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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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