| Literature DB >> 27318712 |
T van Lankveld1,2, J Schoonenboom3,4, R A Kusurkar5, M Volman6, J Beishuizen3, G Croiset5.
Abstract
Beginning medical teachers often see themselves as doctors or researchers rather than as teachers. Using both figured worlds theory and dialogical self theory, this study explores how beginning teachers in the field of undergraduate medical education integrate the teacher role into their identity. A qualitative study was performed, involving 18 beginning medical teachers at a Dutch medical school. The teachers were interviewed twice and kept a logbook over a period of 7 months. The study shows that the integration of the teacher role into the teachers' identity was hampered by the idea that teaching is perceived by others as a low status occupation. Some teachers experienced significant tension because of this, while others showed resilience in resisting the negative associations that were thought to exist regarding teaching. The teachers used five different identity narratives in order to integrate the teacher role into their identity, in which the positions of teacher and doctor or researcher were found to be combined, adopted or rejected in diverse ways. The five identity narratives were: (1) coalition between the I-position of teacher and other I-positions; (2) no integration of the I-position of teacher: holding on to other I-positions; (3) construction of the I-position of teacher and other I-positions as opposites; (4) coalition between the I-position of teacher and a third position of coordinator; and (5) meta-position: trivialising the importance of status. These identity narratives offer starting points for supporting undergraduate teachers during their early professional years.Entities:
Keywords: Dialogical self; Figured world; Identity; Medical teacher; Narrative
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27318712 PMCID: PMC5498609 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-016-9694-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.853
Participants’ demographic information
| n | M (range) | |
|---|---|---|
| Agea | 30.8 (25–46) | |
| Teaching experiencea | 1.3 (0–5) | |
|
| ||
| Male | 3 | |
| Female | 15 | |
|
| ||
| Basic sciences department (tasks: research and teaching) | 8 | |
| Clinical department (tasks: patient care, research and teaching) | 2 | |
| Teaching department (tasks: mainly teaching) | 8 | |
|
| ||
| 100 % teaching | 7 | |
| 50 % teaching, 50 % research, 0 % patient care | 1 | |
| 10–30 % teaching, 70–90 % research, 0 % patient care | 10 | |
|
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| Teaching small groups (bachelor’s phase years 1–3) | 18 | |
| Bedside teaching (master’s phase year 1) | 4 | |
| Co-ordination or educational development | 4 | |
| Lecturing big groups | 0 | |
aIn years
Examples of questions asked during the second interview
| In your logbook, you wrote that you felt that in this medical school, “people tend to think that teaching is something we can all do, alongside other tasks”. Do you have this feeling often? What is it that makes you feel like this? What kind of things strengthen this feeling? What effect does it have on you? |
One of the rows of the all-encompassing matrix
| General information | Identity profile | Tensions experienced | Identity narratives |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lucy 27-years-old, full-time teacher, master’s phase year 1 | As a child, Lucy had always wanted to become a primary school teacher. But when she realised she was a good student, she thought that teacher education would not offer her enough of a challenge. That is why she enrolled in medical school instead, after some encouragement from her father, who had always wanted to be a doctor but who had never had the opportunity. During her studies, she taught. As part of her master’s programme, she did an elective internship in education, which is very uncommon, as such internships are not typically offered in the programme. There she felt completely at home (“This was the only time during my internships when I thought, ‘This is why I’m here. This is what I really want…. Finally, I can really be myself and don’t have to pretend all the time’”). Lucy would like to stay in education for the rest of her career. She has serious plans to pursue a PhD in medical education. In the long run, she would like to add an educational development focus to her current programme involving only teaching, and to become involved in curriculum development | Lucy feels that, especially with doctors, she is looked down on when she introduces herself as a teacher. According to Lucy, her decision to teach is not very well accepted. “When I’m with medical professionals, I find it important to mention that I’m a physician. Otherwise, they’re really quick to look down on you. They treat you as though you have no ambition. They’ll ask me, ‘Do you teach because you want to be a specialist?’ When I answer, ‘No, I teach because it’s what I | When Lucy introduces herself, she says (half jokingly, half seriously) that she wants to become an educational director at a university. She does this in order to prevent awkward silences and to clarify that she does have ambition, as well as to confirm that she takes teaching seriously |
Fig. 1Identity narratives used to integrate the I-position of teacher into one’s identity