Samuel O Clarke1, Jaime Jordan2,3, Lalena M Yarris4, Emilie Fowlkes5, Jaqueline Kurth6, Daniel Runde5, Wendy C Coates2,3. 1. Department of Emergency Medicine UC Davis Sacramento CA. 2. Department of Emergency Medicine Harbor-UCLA Torrance CA. 3. University of California, Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine Los Angeles CA. 4. Department of Emergency Medicine Oregon Health & Science University Portland OR. 5. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics Iowa City IA. 6. Department of Emergency Medicine UCLA Ronald Reagan/Olive View Los Angeles CA.
Abstract
Education scholarship continues to grow within emergency medicine (EM) and in academic medicine in general. Despite a growing interest, would-be education scholars often struggle to find adequate mentorship, research training, funding, and protected time to produce rigorous scholarship. The ways in which individual academic EM departments can support this mission remains an area in need of description. OBJECTIVES: We sought to describe academic EM department chairs' perceptions of education scholarship and facilitators and barriers to producing high-quality education scholarship. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative study using a grounded theory-derived approach. Participants were solicited directly, and semistructured interviews were conducted via telephone. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and were analyzed by three study investigators using a coding matrix. Discrepancies in coding were resolved via in depth discussion. RESULTS: We interviewed seven EM chairs from academic departments throughout North America (six in geographically diverse regions of the United States and one in western Canada). Chairs described education scholarship as lacking clearly defined and measurable outcomes, as well as methodologic rigor. They identified that education faculty within their departments need training and incentives to pursue scholarly work in a system that primarily expects teaching from educators. Chairs acknowledged a lack of access to education research expertise and mentorship within their own departments, but identified potential resources within their local medical schools and universities. They also voiced willingness to support career development opportunities and scholarly work among faculty seeking to perform education research. CONCLUSIONS: Academic EM chairs endorse a need for methodologic training, mentorship, and access to expertise specific to education scholarship. While such resources are often rare within academic EM departments, they may exist within local universities and schools of medicine. Academic EM chairs described themselves as willing and able to support faculty who wish to pursue this type of work.
Education scholarship continues to grow within emergency medicine (EM) and in academic medicine in general. Despite a growing interest, would-be education scholars often struggle to find adequate mentorship, research training, funding, and protected time to produce rigorous scholarship. The ways in which individual academic EM departments can support this mission remains an area in need of description. OBJECTIVES: We sought to describe academic EM department chairs' perceptions of education scholarship and facilitators and barriers to producing high-quality education scholarship. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative study using a grounded theory-derived approach. Participants were solicited directly, and semistructured interviews were conducted via telephone. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and were analyzed by three study investigators using a coding matrix. Discrepancies in coding were resolved via in depth discussion. RESULTS: We interviewed seven EM chairs from academic departments throughout North America (six in geographically diverse regions of the United States and one in western Canada). Chairs described education scholarship as lacking clearly defined and measurable outcomes, as well as methodologic rigor. They identified that education faculty within their departments need training and incentives to pursue scholarly work in a system that primarily expects teaching from educators. Chairs acknowledged a lack of access to education research expertise and mentorship within their own departments, but identified potential resources within their local medical schools and universities. They also voiced willingness to support career development opportunities and scholarly work among faculty seeking to perform education research. CONCLUSIONS: Academic EM chairs endorse a need for methodologic training, mentorship, and access to expertise specific to education scholarship. While such resources are often rare within academic EM departments, they may exist within local universities and schools of medicine. Academic EM chairs described themselves as willing and able to support faculty who wish to pursue this type of work.
Authors: Lalena M Yarris; Amy Miller Juve; Anthony R Artino; Gail M Sullivan; Steven Rougas; Barbara Joyce; Kevin Eva Journal: J Grad Med Educ Date: 2014-09
Authors: Tanya Horsley; James Galipeau; Jennifer Petkovic; Jeanie Zeiter; Stanley J Hamstra; David A Cook Journal: Med Educ Date: 2017-01 Impact factor: 6.251
Authors: Gail M Sullivan; Deborah Simpson; David A Cook; Nicole M DeIorio; Kathryn Andolsek; Lawrence Opas; Ingrid Philibert; Lalena M Yarris Journal: J Grad Med Educ Date: 2014-09
Authors: Jaime Jordan; James Ahn; David Diller; Jeffrey Riddell; Ryan Pedigo; Juliana Tolles; Michael A Gisondi Journal: AEM Educ Train Date: 2021-08-01
Authors: Samuel O Clarke; Jaime Jordan; Lalena M Yarris; Emilie Fowlkes; Jaqueline Kurth; Daniel Runde; Wendy C Coates Journal: AEM Educ Train Date: 2017-11-14