Literature DB >> 19161482

How student models of expertise and innovation impact the development of adaptive expertise in medicine.

Maria Mylopoulos1, Glenn Regehr.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The ability to innovate new solutions in response to daily workplace challenges is an important component of adaptive expertise. Exploring how to optimally develop this skill is therefore of paramount importance to education researchers. This is certainly no less true in health care, where optimal patient care is contingent on the continuous efforts of doctors and other health care workers to provide the best care to their patients through the development and incorporation of new knowledge. Medical education programmes must therefore foster the skills and attitudes necessary to engage future doctors in the systematic development of innovative problem solving. The aim of this paper is to describe the perceptions and experiences of medical students in their third and fourth years of training, and to explore their understanding of their development as adaptive experts.
METHODS: A sample of 25 medical students participated in individual 45-60-minute semi-structured interviews. Interviews were audiotaped, transcribed and entered into NVivo qualitative data analysis software to facilitate a thematic analysis. The analysis was both inductive, in that themes were generated from the data, and deductive, in that our data were meaningful when interpreted in the context of theories of adaptive expertise.
RESULTS: Participants expressed a general belief that, as learners in the health care system, exerting any effort to be innovative was beyond the scope of their responsibilities. Generally, students suggested that innovative practice was the prerogative of experts and an outcome of expert development centred on the acquisition of knowledge and experience.
CONCLUSIONS: Students' perceptions of themselves as having no responsibility to be innovative in their learning process have implications for their learning trajectories as adaptive experts.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19161482     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2008.03254.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Educ        ISSN: 0308-0110            Impact factor:   6.251


  7 in total

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3.  Precision Cancer Medicine: Dynamic Learning of Cancer Biology in a Clinically Meaningful Context.

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5.  How supervision and educational supports impact medical students' preparation for future learning of endotracheal intubation skills: a non-inferiority experimental trial.

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7.  "It is this very knowledge that makes us doctors": an applied thematic analysis of how medical students perceive the relevance of biomedical science knowledge to clinical medicine.

Authors:  Bonny L Dickinson; Kristine Gibson; Kristi VanDerKolk; Jeffrey Greene; Claudia A Rosu; Deborah D Navedo; Kirsten A Porter-Stransky; Lisa E Graves
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  7 in total

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