{"title":"培训数字化会带来什么损失?","authors":"Tanya Freeman, Stephen P. Hibbs","doi":"10.1002/hem3.148","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Haematology professionals in training have a world of learning at their fingertips. Well-written textbooks and review articles are joined by YouTube channels, Twitter accounts, and data interpretation banks. Professional haematology organisations have invested in digital education, providing extensive repositories of podcasts, image banks, and recorded lecture series. Regional and national postgraduate haematology training days and haematology conferences can now be ‘attended’ through a laptop and an internet connection.</p><p>There are clear benefits of digital repositories and remote meeting software for both trainers and trainees. With so many resources to choose from, trainees can direct their own learning through whatever style works best for them<span><sup>1</sup></span> and learn at their own pace. Accessibility is increased: a trainer gives a single lecture for a ‘live’ group, and the recording can be used by trainees who are unwell, who work part-time, or who have clinical commitments during the learning session. Virtual and prerecorded teaching can be used at scale and reduces costs. For international or distant meetings, virtual attendance has a much smaller carbon footprint.</p><p>The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the transition to digital and asynchronous training which may be coagulating to a ‘new normal’. In this article, we argue that this transition should be questioned by presenting five overlooked benefits of in-person, synchronous (‘live’) haematology training.</p><p>First, a face-to-face fixed training commitment provides a protected space and time and a positive social pressure to engage <i>now</i>. Training is often ‘protected’ from clinical commitments, and social etiquette requires enough trainees to be present to avoid embarrassing the trainer. In contrast, virtual sessions tempt trainees to attempt to multitask or defer the learning opportunity altogether, imagining that they can watch the recording later. However, the session recording may join the ever-increasing pile of things we might one day listen to or read—but probably won't get round to.</p><p>Second, live sessions provide a clear and immediate focus for learning. As digital educational repositories proliferate, the amount of available educational material can become overwhelming. How do you decide what to look at or listen to? Is a particular learning resource still up to date? In contrast, live sessions provide focus and a clear agenda for learning. Trainers can highlight major updates and curate the most valuable reading and educational resources to refer to before or after the live session. Interactive sessions can also reveal to trainees the topics that are ‘unknown unknowns’: gaps in their knowledge that they didn't know they needed to know.</p><p>Third, face-to-face training helps trainees to learn from each other. Interacting and connecting with others is essential for learning individually and collectively.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Different ‘learning environments’ help or hinder connections between learners, teachers, and the material being studied. Successful learning is influenced more by the quality of learning environment than the ability and motivation of individual learners.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Picture the traditional learning environment for morphology: trainees sitting together around a multiheader microscope guided by an experienced morphologist. In this deceptively simple environment, trainees inspect a blood film, form observations and interpretations, practice sharing their tentative conclusions verbally, compare these with their peers and trainers, refine their interpretations, and develop a sense of subjectivity. Now picture an individual trainee viewing the same blood film through an online morphology bank: which of these skills are practiced? Even if there is the option to practice interpretation, it is challenging to do so meaningfully when the answer is one click away. Furthermore, ‘The Answer’ on an image bank can be misleadingly definitive, oversimplifying the real world of nuance and uncertainty. These two learning environments are not interchangeable.</p><p>Fourth, face-to-face training helps trainees develop their professional identity. Postgraduate medical training builds clinical and practical skills but also develops an individual's own identity as a professional.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Local groups of haematology trainees form ‘communities of practice’ as they learn and train together.<span><sup>5, 6</sup></span> They can compare themselves to their peers which can be motivating; ‘I want to be more like them’ (and conversely, at times this comparison can be demotivating). When trainees join a community of practice, they become more skilled in the tasks and language of their profession—crucial for developing professional identity. Speaking about uncertainty, sadness, or other vulnerable experiences is important for a healthy professional identity but requires the trust and intimacy that face-to-face teaching fosters. In addition, the times before and after the main teaching event provide an opportunity to catch up and deal with small items of clinical conversation. These interactions are a key part of developing professional identity and trust; they occur unobtrusively when meeting face-to-face.</p><p>Finally, we should consider trainee wellbeing. Face-to-face training is generally more enjoyable than meeting online. When we meet in person, we can enjoy the company of each other, someone making a joke, someone bringing in food, and someone making the coffee. This enjoyment of time together while learning is intrinsically good and helps sustain us through the more difficult parts of the job.</p><p>Perhaps, the real question is to ask what we are trying to achieve during haematology training. Recorded lectures, image banks, and virtual meetings may well be sufficient to attain some learning goals, particularly where these are focused on building knowledge. Digital repositories are excellent resources to prepare for postgraduate exams, and self-directed learning is an important skill to develop throughout the span of a career. But we also need spaces where professional identity is built and shaped, trust between colleagues is developed, and where we take time to enjoy the company of one another. Face-to-face training has been critical to these goals throughout the history of medical training and remains worth preserving in an increasingly digital and asynchronous world.</p><p>Both authors conceptualised the article. Tanya Freeman wrote the initial draft. Stephen P. Hibbs critically reviewed the article and revised it. Both authors agreed to the final version.</p><p>The authors declare no conflict of interest.</p><p>Tanya Freeman is supported by a teaching fellowship funded by the Royal College of Pathologists and Barts Health NHS Trust. Stephen P. Hibbs is supported by a HARP doctoral research fellowship, funded by the Wellcome Trust (Grant number 223500/Z/21/Z). No funding was received for this publication.</p>","PeriodicalId":12982,"journal":{"name":"HemaSphere","volume":"8 8","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":7.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11310406/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"What is lost when training goes digital?\",\"authors\":\"Tanya Freeman, Stephen P. Hibbs\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/hem3.148\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Haematology professionals in training have a world of learning at their fingertips. Well-written textbooks and review articles are joined by YouTube channels, Twitter accounts, and data interpretation banks. Professional haematology organisations have invested in digital education, providing extensive repositories of podcasts, image banks, and recorded lecture series. Regional and national postgraduate haematology training days and haematology conferences can now be ‘attended’ through a laptop and an internet connection.</p><p>There are clear benefits of digital repositories and remote meeting software for both trainers and trainees. With so many resources to choose from, trainees can direct their own learning through whatever style works best for them<span><sup>1</sup></span> and learn at their own pace. Accessibility is increased: a trainer gives a single lecture for a ‘live’ group, and the recording can be used by trainees who are unwell, who work part-time, or who have clinical commitments during the learning session. Virtual and prerecorded teaching can be used at scale and reduces costs. For international or distant meetings, virtual attendance has a much smaller carbon footprint.</p><p>The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the transition to digital and asynchronous training which may be coagulating to a ‘new normal’. In this article, we argue that this transition should be questioned by presenting five overlooked benefits of in-person, synchronous (‘live’) haematology training.</p><p>First, a face-to-face fixed training commitment provides a protected space and time and a positive social pressure to engage <i>now</i>. Training is often ‘protected’ from clinical commitments, and social etiquette requires enough trainees to be present to avoid embarrassing the trainer. In contrast, virtual sessions tempt trainees to attempt to multitask or defer the learning opportunity altogether, imagining that they can watch the recording later. However, the session recording may join the ever-increasing pile of things we might one day listen to or read—but probably won't get round to.</p><p>Second, live sessions provide a clear and immediate focus for learning. As digital educational repositories proliferate, the amount of available educational material can become overwhelming. How do you decide what to look at or listen to? Is a particular learning resource still up to date? In contrast, live sessions provide focus and a clear agenda for learning. Trainers can highlight major updates and curate the most valuable reading and educational resources to refer to before or after the live session. Interactive sessions can also reveal to trainees the topics that are ‘unknown unknowns’: gaps in their knowledge that they didn't know they needed to know.</p><p>Third, face-to-face training helps trainees to learn from each other. Interacting and connecting with others is essential for learning individually and collectively.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Different ‘learning environments’ help or hinder connections between learners, teachers, and the material being studied. Successful learning is influenced more by the quality of learning environment than the ability and motivation of individual learners.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Picture the traditional learning environment for morphology: trainees sitting together around a multiheader microscope guided by an experienced morphologist. In this deceptively simple environment, trainees inspect a blood film, form observations and interpretations, practice sharing their tentative conclusions verbally, compare these with their peers and trainers, refine their interpretations, and develop a sense of subjectivity. Now picture an individual trainee viewing the same blood film through an online morphology bank: which of these skills are practiced? Even if there is the option to practice interpretation, it is challenging to do so meaningfully when the answer is one click away. Furthermore, ‘The Answer’ on an image bank can be misleadingly definitive, oversimplifying the real world of nuance and uncertainty. These two learning environments are not interchangeable.</p><p>Fourth, face-to-face training helps trainees develop their professional identity. Postgraduate medical training builds clinical and practical skills but also develops an individual's own identity as a professional.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Local groups of haematology trainees form ‘communities of practice’ as they learn and train together.<span><sup>5, 6</sup></span> They can compare themselves to their peers which can be motivating; ‘I want to be more like them’ (and conversely, at times this comparison can be demotivating). When trainees join a community of practice, they become more skilled in the tasks and language of their profession—crucial for developing professional identity. Speaking about uncertainty, sadness, or other vulnerable experiences is important for a healthy professional identity but requires the trust and intimacy that face-to-face teaching fosters. In addition, the times before and after the main teaching event provide an opportunity to catch up and deal with small items of clinical conversation. These interactions are a key part of developing professional identity and trust; they occur unobtrusively when meeting face-to-face.</p><p>Finally, we should consider trainee wellbeing. Face-to-face training is generally more enjoyable than meeting online. When we meet in person, we can enjoy the company of each other, someone making a joke, someone bringing in food, and someone making the coffee. This enjoyment of time together while learning is intrinsically good and helps sustain us through the more difficult parts of the job.</p><p>Perhaps, the real question is to ask what we are trying to achieve during haematology training. Recorded lectures, image banks, and virtual meetings may well be sufficient to attain some learning goals, particularly where these are focused on building knowledge. Digital repositories are excellent resources to prepare for postgraduate exams, and self-directed learning is an important skill to develop throughout the span of a career. But we also need spaces where professional identity is built and shaped, trust between colleagues is developed, and where we take time to enjoy the company of one another. Face-to-face training has been critical to these goals throughout the history of medical training and remains worth preserving in an increasingly digital and asynchronous world.</p><p>Both authors conceptualised the article. Tanya Freeman wrote the initial draft. Stephen P. Hibbs critically reviewed the article and revised it. Both authors agreed to the final version.</p><p>The authors declare no conflict of interest.</p><p>Tanya Freeman is supported by a teaching fellowship funded by the Royal College of Pathologists and Barts Health NHS Trust. Stephen P. Hibbs is supported by a HARP doctoral research fellowship, funded by the Wellcome Trust (Grant number 223500/Z/21/Z). No funding was received for this publication.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":12982,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"HemaSphere\",\"volume\":\"8 8\",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":7.6000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-08-08\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11310406/pdf/\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"HemaSphere\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hem3.148\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"HEMATOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"HemaSphere","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hem3.148","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HEMATOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
此外,在主要教学活动之前和之后的时间里,我们还有机会叙叙旧,处理一些临床上的小话题。这些互动是培养专业认同感和信任感的关键部分;在面对面交流时,这些互动不会引人注目。面对面培训通常比在线培训更令人愉快。当我们面对面时,我们可以享受彼此的陪伴,有人开玩笑,有人送来食物,有人煮咖啡。这种边学习边共度时光的乐趣本质上是好的,有助于支撑我们度过工作中更困难的部分。录制的讲座、图片库和虚拟会议很可能足以实现某些学习目标,尤其是在注重知识积累的情况下。数字资料库是准备研究生考试的绝佳资源,而自主学习是在整个职业生涯中培养的一项重要技能。但是,我们也需要建立和塑造专业身份、发展同事间信任以及花时间享受彼此陪伴的空间。在医学培训的历史上,面对面培训对实现这些目标至关重要,在一个日益数字化和异步化的世界里,面对面培训仍然值得保留。Tanya Freeman撰写了初稿。Stephen P. Hibbs对文章进行了严格审阅和修改。Tanya Freeman得到了皇家病理学院和巴兹健康NHS信托基金的教学奖学金支持。斯蒂芬-P.-希布斯(Stephen P. Hibbs)由惠康基金会资助的 HARP 博士研究奖学金支持(资助编号 223500/Z/21/Z)。本出版物未获得任何资助。
Haematology professionals in training have a world of learning at their fingertips. Well-written textbooks and review articles are joined by YouTube channels, Twitter accounts, and data interpretation banks. Professional haematology organisations have invested in digital education, providing extensive repositories of podcasts, image banks, and recorded lecture series. Regional and national postgraduate haematology training days and haematology conferences can now be ‘attended’ through a laptop and an internet connection.
There are clear benefits of digital repositories and remote meeting software for both trainers and trainees. With so many resources to choose from, trainees can direct their own learning through whatever style works best for them1 and learn at their own pace. Accessibility is increased: a trainer gives a single lecture for a ‘live’ group, and the recording can be used by trainees who are unwell, who work part-time, or who have clinical commitments during the learning session. Virtual and prerecorded teaching can be used at scale and reduces costs. For international or distant meetings, virtual attendance has a much smaller carbon footprint.
The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the transition to digital and asynchronous training which may be coagulating to a ‘new normal’. In this article, we argue that this transition should be questioned by presenting five overlooked benefits of in-person, synchronous (‘live’) haematology training.
First, a face-to-face fixed training commitment provides a protected space and time and a positive social pressure to engage now. Training is often ‘protected’ from clinical commitments, and social etiquette requires enough trainees to be present to avoid embarrassing the trainer. In contrast, virtual sessions tempt trainees to attempt to multitask or defer the learning opportunity altogether, imagining that they can watch the recording later. However, the session recording may join the ever-increasing pile of things we might one day listen to or read—but probably won't get round to.
Second, live sessions provide a clear and immediate focus for learning. As digital educational repositories proliferate, the amount of available educational material can become overwhelming. How do you decide what to look at or listen to? Is a particular learning resource still up to date? In contrast, live sessions provide focus and a clear agenda for learning. Trainers can highlight major updates and curate the most valuable reading and educational resources to refer to before or after the live session. Interactive sessions can also reveal to trainees the topics that are ‘unknown unknowns’: gaps in their knowledge that they didn't know they needed to know.
Third, face-to-face training helps trainees to learn from each other. Interacting and connecting with others is essential for learning individually and collectively.2 Different ‘learning environments’ help or hinder connections between learners, teachers, and the material being studied. Successful learning is influenced more by the quality of learning environment than the ability and motivation of individual learners.3 Picture the traditional learning environment for morphology: trainees sitting together around a multiheader microscope guided by an experienced morphologist. In this deceptively simple environment, trainees inspect a blood film, form observations and interpretations, practice sharing their tentative conclusions verbally, compare these with their peers and trainers, refine their interpretations, and develop a sense of subjectivity. Now picture an individual trainee viewing the same blood film through an online morphology bank: which of these skills are practiced? Even if there is the option to practice interpretation, it is challenging to do so meaningfully when the answer is one click away. Furthermore, ‘The Answer’ on an image bank can be misleadingly definitive, oversimplifying the real world of nuance and uncertainty. These two learning environments are not interchangeable.
Fourth, face-to-face training helps trainees develop their professional identity. Postgraduate medical training builds clinical and practical skills but also develops an individual's own identity as a professional.4 Local groups of haematology trainees form ‘communities of practice’ as they learn and train together.5, 6 They can compare themselves to their peers which can be motivating; ‘I want to be more like them’ (and conversely, at times this comparison can be demotivating). When trainees join a community of practice, they become more skilled in the tasks and language of their profession—crucial for developing professional identity. Speaking about uncertainty, sadness, or other vulnerable experiences is important for a healthy professional identity but requires the trust and intimacy that face-to-face teaching fosters. In addition, the times before and after the main teaching event provide an opportunity to catch up and deal with small items of clinical conversation. These interactions are a key part of developing professional identity and trust; they occur unobtrusively when meeting face-to-face.
Finally, we should consider trainee wellbeing. Face-to-face training is generally more enjoyable than meeting online. When we meet in person, we can enjoy the company of each other, someone making a joke, someone bringing in food, and someone making the coffee. This enjoyment of time together while learning is intrinsically good and helps sustain us through the more difficult parts of the job.
Perhaps, the real question is to ask what we are trying to achieve during haematology training. Recorded lectures, image banks, and virtual meetings may well be sufficient to attain some learning goals, particularly where these are focused on building knowledge. Digital repositories are excellent resources to prepare for postgraduate exams, and self-directed learning is an important skill to develop throughout the span of a career. But we also need spaces where professional identity is built and shaped, trust between colleagues is developed, and where we take time to enjoy the company of one another. Face-to-face training has been critical to these goals throughout the history of medical training and remains worth preserving in an increasingly digital and asynchronous world.
Both authors conceptualised the article. Tanya Freeman wrote the initial draft. Stephen P. Hibbs critically reviewed the article and revised it. Both authors agreed to the final version.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Tanya Freeman is supported by a teaching fellowship funded by the Royal College of Pathologists and Barts Health NHS Trust. Stephen P. Hibbs is supported by a HARP doctoral research fellowship, funded by the Wellcome Trust (Grant number 223500/Z/21/Z). No funding was received for this publication.
期刊介绍:
HemaSphere, as a publication, is dedicated to disseminating the outcomes of profoundly pertinent basic, translational, and clinical research endeavors within the field of hematology. The journal actively seeks robust studies that unveil novel discoveries with significant ramifications for hematology.
In addition to original research, HemaSphere features review articles and guideline articles that furnish lucid synopses and discussions of emerging developments, along with recommendations for patient care.
Positioned as the foremost resource in hematology, HemaSphere augments its offerings with specialized sections like HemaTopics and HemaPolicy. These segments engender insightful dialogues covering a spectrum of hematology-related topics, including digestible summaries of pivotal articles, updates on new therapies, deliberations on European policy matters, and other noteworthy news items within the field. Steering the course of HemaSphere are Editor in Chief Jan Cools and Deputy Editor in Chief Claire Harrison, alongside the guidance of an esteemed Editorial Board comprising international luminaries in both research and clinical realms, each representing diverse areas of hematologic expertise.