| Literature DB >> 30022266 |
Thomas Jaarsma1, Henny P A Boshuizen2, Halszka Jarodzka2, Jeroen J G van Merriënboer2,3.
Abstract
Visual problem solving is essential to highly visual and knowledge-intensive professional domains such as clinical pathology, which trainees learn by participating in relevant tasks at the workplace (apprenticeship). Proper guidance of the visual problem solving of apprentices by the master is necessary. Interaction and adaptation to the expertise level of the learner are identified as key ingredients of this guidance. This study focuses on the effect of increased participation of the learner in the task on the interaction and adaptation of the guidance by masters. Thirteen unique dyads consisting of a clinical pathologist (master) and a resident (apprentice) discussed and diagnosed six microscope images. Their dialogues were analysed on their content. The dyads were divided in two groups according to the experience of the apprentice. For each dyad, master and apprentice both operated the microscope for half of the cases. Interaction was operationalised as the equal contribution of both master and apprentice to the dialogue. Adaptation was operationalised as the extent to which the content of the dialogues was adapted to the apprentice's level. The main hypothesis stated that the interaction and adaptation increase when apprentices operate the microscope. Most results confirmed this hypothesis: apprentices contributed more content when participating more and the content of these dialogues better reflected expertise differences of apprentices. Based on these results, it is argued that, for learning visual problem solving in a visual and knowledge-intensive domain, it is not only important to externalise master performance, but also that of the apprentice.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical pathology; Clinical training; Dialogue analysis; Master-apprentice interaction; Visual problem solving
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30022266 PMCID: PMC6245035 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-018-9842-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.853
Constructs, hypotheses, measures, and predictions
| Constructs | Interaction | Adaptation | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | Master and apprentice have an equal share in the content of learning dialogues. | The adaptation of the content of the learning dialogues to the expertise level of the apprentice. | ||
| Hypothesis | The share of the apprentice in the contribution of content to the dialogue increases when apprentices operate the microscope, as compared to when it is operated by masters. | Learning dialogues are better adapted to the level of the apprentice when apprentices operate the microscope than when masters operate it. | ||
| Predictions | ||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Givens | A < M | A = M | LE = HE | LE < HE |
| Simple findings | A < M | A = M | LE = HE | LE > HE |
| Comparative findings | A < M | A = M | LE = HE | LE < HE |
| Search tactics | – | – | – | – |
| Diagnosis | – | – | LE = HE | LE < HE |
| Difficulty | – | – | LE = HE | LE < HE |
| Further testing | – | – | LE = HE | LE < HE |
| Workflow | – | – | LE = HE | LE < HE |
| Pathology knowledge | – | – | – | – |
| Heuristics | A < M | A = M | LE = HE | LE > HE |
| Other’s knowledge and skills | – | – | – | – |
| Own knowledge and skills | – | – | LE = HE | LE > HE |
| Navigation and process | – | – | – | – |
| Experimental procedure | – | – | – | – |
| Acknowledgments | A > M | A = M | – | – |
|
| ||||
| Coverage by apprentice | – | |||
| Short turns by apprentice | – | |||
| Questions by apprentice |
| – | ||
Categories of verbal data, including definitions and examples
| Category | Definition | Example(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Givens | Patient background and the available material | |
| Simple findings | Interpretation of findings, expressed in terms of architecture, colours and shapes, impressions, or specific names |
|
| Comparative findings | Findings that are expressed as comparisons to mental images of (normal tissue), including artefacts and absent features |
|
| Search tactics | Distinctions between relevant and irrelevant areas or specific features mentioned as search targets |
|
| Diagnosis | Hypotheses, rejected hypotheses and statements on the diagnosis |
|
| Difficulty | Comments on the typicality of a case, or on bringing external knowledge or expertise to solve it |
|
| Further testing | On stainings as a next step in the diagnostic process |
|
| Workflow | On (the relation to) previous or subsequent stages of the workflow |
|
| Pathology knowledge | Statements on pathology knowledge |
|
| Heuristics | Suboptimal viewing strategies used to obtain information from the image, such as comparisons within a case or with a previous case |
|
| Other’s knowl. and skills | Reflections on knowledge and skills of the other speaker |
|
| Own knowl. and skills | Reflections on one’s own knowledge and skills |
|
| Navigation and process | Navigation moves and references to a certain location, and the diagnostic process |
|
| Experimental procedure | On the experimental procedure and set-up, or on what the participant would have done in practice |
|
| Acknowledgments | All acknowledgments and utterances of disagreement |
|
Frequencies (n) and standardized residuals (z) of the content categories, for interaction (left) and adaptation (right)
| Interaction | Adaptation | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Operated by master | Operated by apprentice | Operated by master | Operated by apprentice | |||||||||||||
| Apprentice | Master | Apprentice | Master | LE | HE | LE | HE | |||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Givens | 44 | − 1.17 | 69 | 1.09 | 110 | 4.38* | 36 | − 4.36* | 51 | − 2.52* | 62 | 3.38* | 80 | − 0.78 | 66 | 0.95 |
| Simple findings | 251 | 1.18 | 251 | − 1.1 | 361 | 3.77* | 234 | − 3.75* | 353 | 1.72 | 149 | − 2.31* | 344 | − 0.65 | 252 | 0.79 |
| Comparative findings | 65 | 1.25 | 55 | − 1.16 | 75 | 1.55 | 51 | − 1.54 | 78 | 0.12 | 42 | − 0.15 | 85 | 1.12 | 41 | − 1.36 |
| Search tactics | 27 | − 1.79 | 55 | 1.67 | 33 | − 0.71 | 42 | 0.71 | 50 | − 0.36 | 32 | 0.48 | 46 | 0.17 | 29 | − 0.21 |
| Diagnosis | 67 | − 2.47* | 128 | 2.30* | 94 | − 1.26 | 121 | 1.25 | 120 | − 0.46 | 75 | 0.61 | 107 | − 1.9 | 108 | 2.31* |
| Difficulty | 16 | − 2.52* | 48 | 2.34* | 23 | − 0.57 | 29 | 0.56 | 36 | − 0.79 | 28 | 1.06 | 20 | − 1.99 | 32 | 2.42* |
| Further testing | 33 | 0.01 | 38 | − 0.01 | 31 | − 3.81* | 91 | 3.80* | 42 | − 0.53 | 29 | 0.70 | 66 | − 0.81 | 56 | 0.99 |
| Workflow | 19 | − 1.6 | 40 | 1.49 | 22 | − 0.67 | 29 | 0.67 | 19 | − 3.06* | 40 | 4.1* | 19 | − 2.08* | 32 | 2.54* |
| Pathology knowledge | 41 | − 5.59* | 165 | 5.20* | 59 | − 5.04* | 167 | 5.02* | 129 | − 0.28 | 77 | 0.37 | 143 | 0.68 | 83 | − 0.83 |
| Heuristics | 7 | − 2.04* | 25 | 1.90 | 22 | − 0.48 | 27 | 0.48 | 19 | − 0.34 | 13 | 0.45 | 44 | 2.72* | 5 | − 3.31* |
| Other’s knowledge and skills | 1 | – | 14 | 2.10* | 0 | – | 12 | 2.43* | 12 | 0.77 | 3 | – | 8 | 0.31 | 4 | − 0.38 |
| Own knowledge and skills | 50 | 1.85 | 33 | − 1.72 | 51 | 2.05* | 26 | − 2.04* | 59 | 0.79 | 24 | − 1.05 | 41 | − 0.74 | 36 | 0.9 |
| Navigation and process | 91 | − 1.48 | 138 | 1.38 | 147 | − 2.71* | 222 | 2.69* | 150 | 0.25 | 79 | − 0.34 | 237 | 1.07 | 133 | − 1.3 |
| Experimental procedure | 24 | − 0.12 | 29 | 0.11 | 29 | 1.64 | 14 | − 1.63 | 44 | 1.71 | 9 | − 2.29* | 19 | − 1.32 | 24 | 1.61 |
| Acknowledgments | 392 | 6.60* | 214 | − 6.14* | 389 | 0.89 | 358 | − 0.89 | 397 | 0.42 | 209 | − 0.56 | 478 | 1.52 | 268 | − 1.85 |
An asterisk indicates a significant difference (p < .05) between actual and expected frequency (i.e., − 1.96 ≥ z ≥ 1.96). A negative z-value indicates that the frequency is lower than expected, a positive value means it is higher than expected. For frequencies smaller than five, no z-value could be calculated
Fig. 1Visualization of the level of interaction between apprentice and master, as a function of microscope operation by masters (left panel) and apprentice (right panel). The bars indicate the difference between the master and apprentice: the smaller, the more equal their contributions were. An asterisk indicates that the frequencies for apprentice and master significantly deviated from their expected frequencies (see Table 3)
Fig. 2Visualization of the level of adaptation of the content to the level of the apprentice, as a function of microscope operation by masters (left panel) and apprentice (right panel). The bars indicate the difference between LE dyads and HE dyads: the smaller, the more equal the content was in these dyads. An asterisk indicates that the frequencies for LE and HE dyads significantly deviated from their expected frequencies (see Table 3)
Part of a dialogue between an experienced apprentice and a master, with the apprentice operating the microscope
| Sgmnt | Apprentice | Master | Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | I think that, because of that localisation in the colon ascendens it is, it corresponds well with a Sessile Serrated Adenoma and it also has the morphological characteristics of that, I believe |
| |
| 2 | With those horizontally oriented tubes against the basement membrane |
| |
| 3 | And some occasional branching. With low branches |
| |
| 4 | Yes, and what are your main criteria to distinguish between a hyperplastic polyp and a Sessile Serrated Adenoma? |
| |
| 5 | Yes, well, these—to me that is primarily those low-branching tubes |
| |
| 6 | These, here, horizontal and also like anchors- |
| |
| 7 | Yes |
| |
| 8 | -or as try squares- |
| |
| 9 | Yes, but you said ‘branching’. But what you actually mean is- |
| |
| 10 | Yes, horizontal- |
| |
| 11 | -angulated, hooked |
| |
| 12 | Yes, parts of it are hooked, |
| |
| 13 | but sometimes there is a kind of branching |
| |
| 14 | And, according to me, a hyperplastic polyp does not branch so low |
| |
| 15 | And why would it not be dysplastic? |
| |
| 16 | I think it matures well towards the surface |
| |
| 17 | There is some stacking down below, |
| |
| 18 | but at the surface it is in fact beatifully single-layered |
| |
| 19 | and also, yes, neither do I find the morphology of the nucleus dysplastic |
| |
| 20 | There is little anisokaryosis in it |
| |
| 21 | Little stacking |
|
The dialogue is split by segment, with the corresponding codes being given per segment. Note that a dialogue turn can consist of multiple segments