journal
Journals Advances in Health Sciences Ed...

Advances in Health Sciences Education

https://read.qxmd.com/read/38683302/-teaching-capital-a-sociological-analysis-of-medical-educator-portfolios-for-promotion
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mette Krogh Christensen, I M Pedersen, G Wichmann-Hansen
Medical educator portfolios (MEP) are increasingly recognized as a tool for developing and documenting teaching performance in Health Professions Education. However, there is a need to better understand the complex interplay between institutional guidelines and how teachers decode those guidelines and assign value to teaching merits. To gain a deeper understanding of this dynamic, this study employed a sociological analysis to understand how medical educators aspiring to professorships use MEPs to display their teaching merits and how cultural capital is reflected in these artefacts...
April 29, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38683301/-i-felt-like-a-little-kind-of-jolt-of-energy-in-my-chest-embodiment-in-learning-in-continuing-professional-development-for-general-practitioners
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stense Kromann Vestergaard, Torsten Risor
Learning in medical education encompasses a broad spectrum of learning theories, and an embodiment perspective has recently begun to emerge in continuing professional development (CPD) for health professionals. However, empirical research into the experience of embodiment in learning in CPD is sparse, particularly in the practice of general medicine. In this study, we aimed to explore general practitioners' (GPs') learning experiences during CPD from an embodiment perspective, studying the appearance of elements of embodiment-the body, actions, emotions, cognition, and interactions with the surroundings and others-to build an explanatory structure of embodiment in learning...
April 29, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38683300/a-scoping-review-of-the-questionnaires-used-for-the-assessment-of-the-perception-of-undergraduate-students-of-the-learning-environment-in-healthcare-professions-education-programs
#3
REVIEW
Banan Mukhalalati, Ola Yakti, Sara Elshami
The learning environment (LE) includes social interactions, organizational culture, structures, and physical and virtual spaces that influence the learning experiences of students. Despite numerous studies exploring the perception of healthcare professional students (HCPS) of their LE, the validity evidence of the utilized questionnaires remains unclear. This scoping review aimed to identify questionnaires used to examine the perception of undergraduate HCPS of their LE and to assess their validity evidence...
April 29, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38683299/historicity-and-the-impossible-present
#4
EDITORIAL
Rachel H Ellaway
In this editorial the editor considers issues of historicity (understanding things in their historical context) in health professions education and the sciences thereof, and argues for more attention to historical and other contextual factors in creating and appraising the research literature.
April 29, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38649529/inconsistencies-in-rater-based-assessments-mainly-affect-borderline-candidates-but-using-simple-heuristics-might-improve-pass-fail-decisions
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefan K Schauber, Anne O Olsen, Erik L Werner, Morten Magelssen
INTRODUCTION: Research in various areas indicates that expert judgment can be highly inconsistent. However, expert judgment is indispensable in many contexts. In medical education, experts often function as examiners in rater-based assessments. Here, disagreement between examiners can have far-reaching consequences. The literature suggests that inconsistencies in ratings depend on the level of performance a to-be-evaluated candidate shows. This possibility has not been addressed deliberately and with appropriate statistical methods...
April 23, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38639849/group-concept-mapping-for-health-professions-education-scholarship
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan C Mirabal, Darcy A Reed, Yvonne Steinert, Cynthia R Whitehead, Scott M Wright, Sean Tackett
While explicit conceptual models help to inform research, they are left out of much of the health professions education (HPE) literature. One reason may be the limited understanding about how to develop conceptual models with intention and rigor. Group concept mapping (GCM) is a mixed methods conceptualization approach that has been used to develop frameworks for planning and evaluation, but GCM has not been common in HPE. The purpose of this article is to describe GCM in order to make it more accessible for HPE scholars...
April 19, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634967/should-i-do-a-synthesis-i-e-literature-review
#7
EDITORIAL
H Carrie Chen, Ayelet Kuper, Jennifer Cleland, Patricia O'Sullivan
This column is intended to address the kinds of knotty problems and dilemmas with which many scholars grapple in studying health professions education. In this article, the authors address the question of whether one should conduct a literature review or knowledge synthesis, considering the why, when, and how, as well as its potential pitfalls. The goal is to guide supervisors and students who are considering whether to embark on a literature review in education research.
April 18, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38598135/teaching-through-their-eyes-effects-on-optometry-teachers-adaptivity-and-students-learning-when-teachers-see-students-gaze
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert-Jan Korteland, Ellen Kok, Casper Hulshof, Tamara van Gog
Adaptive teacher support fosters effective learning in one-to-one teaching sessions, which are a common way of learning complex visual tasks in the health sciences. Adaptive support is tailored to student needs, and this is difficult in complex visual tasks as visual problem-solving processes are covert and thus cannot be directly observed by the teacher. Eye-tracking apparatus can measure covert processes and make them visible in gaze displays: visualizations of where a student looks while executing a task...
April 10, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38592598/a-qualitative-study-of-career-decision-making-among-african-and-asian-international-medical-students-in-china-process-challenges-and-strategies
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wen Li, Hong Sun, Asaduzzaman Khan, Robyn Gillies
China hosts around 68,000 international medical students (IMSs) primarily from lower income countries in Africa and Asia, who have the potential to contribute to international medical services. Understanding how these IMSs make career decisions can help better address the issue of global medical workforce shortage. However, such research is limited. Our study aims to explore the career decision-making process of China-educated IMSs, the challenges they experienced and the strategies they employed.In this exploratory qualitative study, we conducted semi-structured interviews with IMSs educated in China in 2022 using purposeful sampling...
April 9, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38563873/game-design-elements-of-serious-games-in-the-education-of-medical-and-healthcare-professions-a-mixed-methods-systematic-review-of-underlying-theories-and-teaching-effectiveness
#10
REVIEW
Alexandra Aster, Matthias Carl Laupichler, Saskia Zimmer, Tobias Raupach
Serious games, as a learning resource, enhance their game character by embedding game design elements that are typically used in entertainment games. Serious games in its entirety have already proven their teaching effectiveness in different educational contexts including medical education. The embedded game design elements play an essential role for a game's effectiveness and thus they should be selected based on evidence-based theories. For game design elements embedded in serious games used for the education of medical and healthcare professions, an overview of theories for the selection lacks...
April 2, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38555550/the-effects-of-gaze-display-feedback-on-medical-students-self-monitoring-and-learning-in-radiology
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ellen M Kok, Diederick C Niehorster, Anouk van der Gijp, Dirk R Rutgers, William F Auffermann, Marieke van der Schaaf, Liesbeth Kester, Tamara van Gog
Self-monitoring is essential for effectively regulating learning, but difficult in visual diagnostic tasks such as radiograph interpretation. Eye-tracking technology can visualize viewing behavior in gaze displays, thereby providing information about visual search and decision-making. We hypothesized that individually adaptive gaze-display feedback improves posttest performance and self-monitoring of medical students who learn to detect nodules in radiographs. We investigated the effects of: (1) Search displays, showing which part of the image was searched by the participant; and (2) Decision displays, showing which parts of the image received prolonged attention in 78 medical students...
March 31, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38502461/impact-of-a-university-teaching-of-integrative-medicine-on-the-social-representations-of-undergraduate-medical-students
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julien Poimboeuf, Éric Mener, Laure Fiquet, Pierric Renaut
Integrative medicine, need to be inoffensive, effective, and of quality (World Health Organization). In 2010, the American Society of Teachers of Family Medicine approved 19 competencies for teaching integrative medicine to residents. In 2018, the University of Rennes created a course: "Integrative Medicine and Complementary Therapies". Up until then, the only feedback from the courses was the students' opinions. We investigated the impact on medical students' social representation.We performed a sociological analysis of students' social representations before and after the course...
March 19, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38502460/does-summative-count-the-influence-of-the-awarding-of-study-credits-on-feedback-use-and-test-taking-motivation-in-medical-progress-testing
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elise V van Wijk, Floris M van Blankenstein, Jeroen Donkers, Roemer J Janse, Jacqueline Bustraan, Liesbeth G M Adelmeijer, Eline A Dubois, Friedo W Dekker, Alexandra M J Langers
Despite the increasing implementation of formative assessment in medical education, its' effect on learning behaviour remains questionable. This effect may depend on how students value formative, and summative assessments differently. Informed by Expectancy Value Theory, we compared test preparation, feedback use, and test-taking motivation of medical students who either took a purely formative progress test (formative PT-group) or a progress test that yielded study credits (summative PT-group). In a mixed-methods study design, we triangulated quantitative questionnaire data (n = 264), logging data of an online PT feedback system (n = 618), and qualitative interview data (n = 21) to compare feedback use, and test-taking motivation between the formative PT-group (n = 316), and the summative PT-group (n = 302)...
March 19, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38441827/defining-a-competency-framework-for-health-and-social-professionals-to-promote-healthy-aging-throughout-the-lifespan-an-international-delphi-study
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Míriam Rodríguez-Monforte, Carles Fernández-Jané, Marietta Bracha, Adrianna Bartoszewska, Mariusz Kozakiewicz, Mariel Leclerc, Endrit Nimani, Pauliina Soanvaara, Sari Jarvinen, Meike Van Sherpenseel, Miriam van der Velde, António Alves-Lopes, Marietta Handgraaf, Christian Grüneberg, Elena Carrillo-Alvarez
The promotion of healthy aging has become a priority in most parts of the world and should be promoted at all ages. However, the baseline training of health and social professionals is currently not adequately tailored to these challenges. This paper reports the results of a Delphi study conducted to reach expert agreement about health and social professionals' competencies to promote healthy aging throughout the lifespan within the SIENHA project. Materials and methods: This study was developed following the CREDES standards...
March 5, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38438699/dual-purposes-by-design-exploring-alignment-between-residents-and-academic-advisors-documents-in-a-longitudinal-program
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shiphra Ginsburg, Lynfa Stroud, Ryan Brydges, Lindsay Melvin, Rose Hatala
Longitudinal academic advising (AA) and coaching programs are increasingly implemented in competency based medical education (CBME) to help residents reflect and act on the voluminous assessment data they receive. Documents created by residents for purposes of reflection are often used for a second, summative purpose-to help competence committees make decisions-which may be problematic. Using inductive, thematic analysis we analyzed written comments generated by 21 resident-AA dyads in one large internal medicine program who met over a 2 year period to determine what residents write when asked to reflect, how this aligns with what the AAs report, and what changes occur over time (total 109 resident self-reflections and 105 AA reports)...
March 5, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38418637/no-cow-on-the-ice-a-tail-of-word-games
#16
EDITORIAL
Rune D Jensen, Rachel H Ellaway
In this editorial, the editors raise the issues of language games in the field of health profession education and examines the implications of translating and communicating meaning from one context to another. This examination raises five issues that scholars in healthcare professions education should consider.
February 28, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38411869/playing-well-with-others-lessons-from-theatre-for-the-health-professions-about-collaboration-creativity-and-community
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julia Gray, Carrie Cartmill, Cynthia Whitehead
Despite collaboration among different professions being recognized as fundamentally important to contemporary and future healthcare practice, the concept is woefully undertheorized. This has implications for how health professions educators might best introduce students to interprofessional collaboration and support their transition into interprofessional, collaborative workplaces. To address this, we engage in a conceptual analysis of published collaborative, interprofessional practices and conceptual understandings in theatre, as a highly collaborative art form and industry, to advance thinking in the health professions, specifically to inform interprofessional education...
February 27, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38401015/transforming-self-experienced-vulnerability-into-professional-strength-a-dialogical-narrative-analysis-of-medical-students-reflective-writing
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eivind Alexander Valestrand, Monika Kvernenes, Elizabeth Anne Kinsella, Steinar Hunskaar, Edvin Schei
Medical students' efforts to learn person-centered thinking and behavior can fall short due to the dissonance between person-centered clinical ideals and the prevailing epistemological stereotypes of medicine, where physicians' life events, relations, and emotions seem irrelevant to their professional competence. This paper explores how reflecting on personal life experiences and considering the relevance for one's future professional practice can inform first-year medical students' initial explorations of professional identities...
February 24, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38393427/persistence-as-a-mediator-between-motivation-and-performance-accomplishment-among-medical-students-a-mixed-method-approach
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eman Faisal
This study examined the relationship between motivation, performance accomplishment, and persistence as a mediator among medical students. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected through a two-stage sequential design to investigate the hypothesised model. A sample of 645 medical undergraduates participated in the quantitative stage, responding to an electronically structured questionnaire. Confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modelling were utilised to analyse the data and assess the fit of the conceptual model...
February 23, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38388855/assessing-supervisor-versus-trainee-viewpoints-of-entrustment-through-cognitive-and-affective-lenses-an-artificial-intelligence-investigation-of-bias-in-feedback
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian C Gin, Olle Ten Cate, Patricia S O'Sullivan, Christy Boscardin
The entrustment framework redirects assessment from considering only trainees' competence to decision-making about their readiness to perform clinical tasks independently. Since trainees and supervisors both contribute to entrustment decisions, we examined the cognitive and affective factors that underly their negotiation of trust, and whether trainee demographic characteristics may bias them. Using a document analysis approach, we adapted large language models (LLMs) to examine feedback dialogs (N = 24,187, each with an associated entrustment rating) between medical student trainees and their clinical supervisors...
February 23, 2024: Advances in Health Sciences Education
journal
journal
32591
1
2
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.