Suzanne Bunniss1, Diane R Kelly. 1. Department of General Practice Section, NHS Education for Scotland, Glasgow, UK. Suzanne.bunniss@nes.scot.nhs.uk
Abstract
CONTEXT: The growing popularity of less familiar methodologies in medical education research, and the use of related data collection methods, has made it timely to revisit some basic assumptions regarding knowledge and evidence. METHODS: This paper outlines four major research paradigms and examines the methodological questions that underpin the development of knowledge through medical education research. DISCUSSION: This paper explores the rationale behind different research designs, and shows how the underlying research philosophy of a study can directly influence what is captured and reported. It also explores the interpretivist perspective in some depth to show how less familiar paradigm perspectives can provide useful insights to the complex questions generated by modern healthcare practice. CONCLUSIONS: This paper concludes that the quality of research is defined by the integrity and transparency of the research philosophy and methods, rather than the superiority of any one paradigm. By demonstrating that different methodological approaches deliberately include and exclude different types of data, this paper highlights how competing knowledge philosophies have practical implications for the findings of a study.
CONTEXT: The growing popularity of less familiar methodologies in medical education research, and the use of related data collection methods, has made it timely to revisit some basic assumptions regarding knowledge and evidence. METHODS: This paper outlines four major research paradigms and examines the methodological questions that underpin the development of knowledge through medical education research. DISCUSSION: This paper explores the rationale behind different research designs, and shows how the underlying research philosophy of a study can directly influence what is captured and reported. It also explores the interpretivist perspective in some depth to show how less familiar paradigm perspectives can provide useful insights to the complex questions generated by modern healthcare practice. CONCLUSIONS: This paper concludes that the quality of research is defined by the integrity and transparency of the research philosophy and methods, rather than the superiority of any one paradigm. By demonstrating that different methodological approaches deliberately include and exclude different types of data, this paper highlights how competing knowledge philosophies have practical implications for the findings of a study.
Authors: Lisa Brice-Leddy; Debbie Park; William Bateman; January Drysdale; Laura Ratushny; Suad Musse; Stephanie A Nixon Journal: Physiother Can Date: 2020 Impact factor: 1.037
Authors: Sara A Hoffman; Gwendolyn Ledford; Kenzie A Cameron; Siobhan M Phillips; Christine A Pellegrini Journal: J Clin Nurs Date: 2018-12-10 Impact factor: 3.036
Authors: Bruce L Henschen; Sara Shaunfield; Blair P Golden; Lauren A Gard; Jennifer Bierman; Daniel B Evans; Diane B Wayne; Elizabeth R Ryan; Monica Yang; Kenzie A Cameron Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2021-06-07 Impact factor: 5.128