| Literature DB >> 35389151 |
Jennifer Cleland1, Anna MacLeod2.
Abstract
There is increasing interest in the use of ethnography as a qualitative research approach to explore, in depth, issues of culture in health professions education (HPE). Our specific focus in this article is incorporating the digital into ethnography. Digital technologies are pervasively and increasingly shaping the way we interact, behave, think, and communicate as health professions educators and learners. Understanding the contemporary culture(s) of HPE thus means paying attention to what goes on in digital spaces. In this paper, we critically consider some of the potential issues when the field of ethnography exists outside the space time continuum, including the need to engage with theory in research about technology and digital spaces in HPE. After a very brief review of the few HPE studies that have used digital ethnography, we scrutinize what can be gained when ethnography encompasses the digital world, particularly in relation to untangling sociomaterial aspects of HPE. We chart the shifts inherent in conducting ethnographic research within the digital landscape, specifically those related to research field, the role of the researcher and ethical issues. We then use two examples to illustrate possible HPE research questions and potential strategies for using digital ethnography to answer those questions: using digital tools in the conduct of an ethnographic study and how to conduct an ethnography of a digital space. We conclude that acknowledging the pervasiveness of technologies in the design, delivery and experiences of HPE opens up new research questions which can be addressed by embracing the digital in ethnography.Entities:
Keywords: Digital; Ethnography; Health professions education research; Sociomateriality; Technology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35389151 PMCID: PMC8988472 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-022-10101-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.629
Example: Digital ethnography in medical education research
| To support our statement that medical education research has yet to embrace digital ethnography in the same way as it has other qualitative methods, we conducted a focused Scopus search on "medical" AND ""ethnography" AND "digital" on 26th March 2021. We set no date limits. This returned 83 papers. We repeated the same search on PubMed. This returned 32 papers. After checking for duplicates we were left with only five empirical studies which could be considered broadly related to medical education or training (not patient care, or the organisation of care) and which included analysis of some form of digital data (Chretien et al., |
Similarities and differences between traditional and digital ethnography
| Traditional ethnography | Digital ethnography | |
|---|---|---|
| Philosophy | Multiple—e.g., realist, interpretive, critical (e.g., Cuncliffe | As traditional but also embracing the sociomaterial (e.g., Fenwick et al., |
| Aim | To understand culture and social practices and their influences, the “lived reality” of people | |
| Immersion | Long-term engagement (often months and years) in the field | Anywhere from brief to long term. While immersion in the field may be brief, the nature of digital data and research tools may allow the researcher to trace long-term engagement in a particular topic area using digital footprints |
| Role of the researcher | Participant observation—interacting with participants/ informants in real life, along the continuum from complete participant to complete observer | Technologically facilitated “being there” |
| Setting | Traditionally exotic cultures, more recently closer to home (e.g., fieldwork in the community where the researcher lives and works). Referred to as “analogue” | Digital and online environments, or a combination of digital and analogue |
| The notion of field/place | Situated in time and space | The “place(s)” where the social processes under study occur No time and space boundaries |
| Data collection tools | Video cameras, voice recorders, kinship diagrams and a notepad | Website archives, blogs, servers, content management systems, bots, laptops, smartphones, tablets, screen shots, chatroom interviews and data |
| Practicalities | Learning about people, their culture and activities is inherent in all ethnography. Where digital spaces are involved, the researcher must learn to navigate the digital platform or website and learn the etiquette of the online environment—what is acceptable, what is not—to get a sense of situated meanings and the contexts in which they occur. This is no different in principle from any ethnographic immersion | |
| Reflexivity | The researcher is inherent to the process. The researcher must constantly consider their position in the research and recognise, for example, the implications of their assumptions, previous experiences, etc., on data collection and interpretation | |
| Theory | Inductive rather than deductive. Accumulation of data and understanding to build toward general patterns or explanatory theories (ie. theory building rather than theory testing) | |
Communication may be digital or may combine digital and face-to-face interactions
Some social interactions take place solely online. For example, during Covid-19, many groups of students were unable to return to university. While physically displaced from their peers and their places of learning, students could only use digital spaces for communication and social interaction. Addressing questions such as how individuals and groups negotiated a digital presence in light of physical separation, in what ways they used different digital environments during their isolation and how meaningful the online sphere was for social organisation and identity formation is important Consider a study group. The group may meet weekly to discuss their text(s) of choice. However, members may WhatsApp between meetings to exchange ideas as to the meaning, value and worth of what they have read. They may maintain a Facebook Group where they share other articles about the topic, or even humorous memes about the text. To only observe the meeting would mean many of the group interactions were invisible, whereas being both an observer at the meeting and a member of the WhatsApp or Facebook group would allow the researcher fuller access to the group’s social interactions, and more understanding of their lives |
Ethnography of a digital space
Role of Theory: Taking a sociomaterial approach purposefully decentres the human to draw attention to other elements of pervasive challenges. In this case, approaching the cyber ethnography from a sociomaterial perspective would allow the researchers to focus on the social media platform “Twitter,” itself, highlighting its opportunities and affordances in building a geographically distributed, like-minded community. -Textual Analysis: Search Twitter for the hashtags: #SheMD, #WomeninMedicine, #GirlMedTwitter, #Ilooklikeasurgeon, collecting relevant anecdotes. -Observing and Field noting: “Tweetchat” focused on Women in Medicine (A moderated twitter discussion). -Follow up Interviews: Twitter users who participate in the above hashtags and Tweetchats could be reached by Direct Messaging to invite them to participate in a more formal conversation. Conducting interviews that focus on the affordances of Twitter itself for building a like-minded community (rather than the lived experience of microaggressions). |
Using digital tools to conduct an ethnographic study
A typology of some mainstream digital ethnographic approaches and their actual or potential application to HPER
| Approach | Description | What it might bring? | Potential research questions | The question could be explored by | To learn more, read | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chatnography | Focuses on social media as a communication tool, without making the focus of the work the social media itself | Twitter usage has grown in the last decade; yet, we do not have a good sense of the variety of reasons medical learners choose to connect via this platform | How do medical students construct identity in relation to a particular social issue? | .. observing, and tracking, the patterns of Twitter users related to a relevant “hashtag” (ie. #blacklivesmatter, #metoo | Käihkö ( | Chretien et al.’s ( |
| Cyber/online/Virtual ethnography | Adapts traditional ethnographic methods (ie. observation) to study communities and cultures generated through computer-medicated communication | In our increasingly digital world, reconfiguring traditional ethnographic methods like observation offers new insights into undertheorized elements of our educational and other practices | How is learner engagement inspired during online continuing professional development offerings? | .. gaining access to web-conferenced events (ie. Zoom, Teams), and taking fieldnotes about various strategies instructors use to include learners | Hine ( | Arenas ( |
| Discourse centred online ethnography | Uses systematic observation of online activities and interviews with online actors to be conducted in complement with a linguistic analysis of mobile log data | Ethnographic insights may augment our understanding of how learners use mobile technologies, allowing us to explore technology-mediated discourse, and learn more about learners’ sociolinguistic awareness | How do resident physicians use mobile clinical decision-making software (i.e. UpToDate) in practice? | .. accessing mobile phone logs (with permission) and using automated text mining to understand common queries, followed by interviews with residents focused on why, when, and how they used these tools | Androutsopoulos ( | Goergalou ( |
| Netography | Adapted to the unique computer mediated contingencies of today’s social world to learn more about people’s behaviours on the Internet | Understanding how and when people turn to a variety of web-based resources to facilitate their learning would help us learn more about the affordances of various resources | How are study habits influenced by the availability of digital resources? | .. tracking students’ access to a variety of resources, comparing YouTube video hits with ebook downloads from library resources | Kozinets ( | Eaton and Pasquini ( |
| Network ethnography | Mixed method approach using qualitative and quantitative data to study practice (i.e.—everyday sayings and doings) | The HPE community is embracing a practice-turn. Focusing on online behaviour from a practice perspective orients our attention on how everyday activity (in this case, everyday Internet activity) constructs our experiences | How do candidates engage in the practice of preparing for medical school interviews in 2021? | … accessing a variety of internet resources focused on admissions, including Reddit AMAs (ask me anything) about admissions, blogs of students who have successfully gained access, Pinterest boards containing admissions advice, and quantitative metadata of various admissions focused websites | Berthod et al. ( | Ball ( |