Literature DB >> 30475270

Technologies of Exposure: Videoconferenced Distributed Medical Education as a Sociomaterial Practice.

Anna MacLeod1, Paula Cameron, Olga Kits, Jonathan Tummons.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Videoconferencing-a network of buttons, screens, microphones, cameras, and speakers-is one way to ensure that undergraduate medical curricula are comparably delivered across distributed medical education (DME) sites, a common requirement for accreditation. However, few researchers have critically explored the role of videoconference technologies in day-to-day DME. The authors, therefore, conducted a three-year ethnographic study of a Canadian undergraduate DME program.
METHOD: Drawing on 108 hours of observations, 33 interviews, and analysis of 65 documents-all collected at two campuses between January 2013 and February 2015-the authors explored the question, "What is revealed when we consider videoconferencing for DME as a sociomaterial practice?"
RESULTS: The authors describe three interconnected ways that videoconference systems operate as unintended "technologies of exposure": visual, curricular, and auditory. Videoconferencing inadvertently exposes both mundane and extraordinary images and sounds, offering access to the informal, unintended, and even disavowed curriculum of everyday medical education. The authors conceptualize these exposures as sociomaterial practices, which add an additional layer of complexity for members of medical school communities.
CONCLUSIONS: This analysis challenges the assumption that videoconferencing merely extends the bricks-and-mortar classroom. The authors discuss practical implications and recommend more critical consideration of the ways videoconferencing shifts the terrain of medical education. These findings point to a need for more critically oriented research exploring the ways DME technologies transform medical education, in both intended and unintended ways.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 30475270     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002536

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  4 in total

1.  Actor-network theory and ethnography: Sociomaterial approaches to researching medical education.

Authors:  Anna MacLeod; Paula Cameron; Rola Ajjawi; Olga Kits; Jonathan Tummons
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2019-06

Review 2.  Disruption in the space-time continuum: why digital ethnography matters.

Authors:  Jennifer Cleland; Anna MacLeod
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2022-04-07       Impact factor: 3.629

3.  Negotiating humanity: an ethnography of cadaver-based simulation.

Authors:  Anna MacLeod; Paula Cameron; Victoria Luong; George Kovacs; Lucy Patrick; Molly Fredeen; Olga Kits; Jonathan Tummons
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2022-08-22       Impact factor: 3.629

4.  The "Uncurated Exposure" of Videoconferencing.

Authors:  Jennifer Cleland
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2020-09       Impact factor: 7.840

  4 in total

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