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Sukhera, Javeed; Milne, Alexandra; Teunissen, Pim W.; Lingard, Lorelei; Watling, Chris – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2018
Emerging research on implicit bias recognition and management within health professions describes individually focused educational interventions without considering workplace influences. Workplace learning theories highlight how individual agency and workplace structures dynamically interact to produce change within individuals and learning…
Descriptors: Bias, Workplace Learning, Stereotypes, Health Occupations
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Dennis, A. A.; Foy, M. J.; Monrouxe, L. V.; Rees, C. E. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2018
Emotion characterises learners' feedback experiences. While the failure-to-fail literature suggests that emotion may be important, little is known about the role of emotion for educators. Secondary analyses were therefore conducted on data exploring 110 trainers' and trainees' feedback experiences. Group and individual narrative interviews were…
Descriptors: Work Environment, Feedback (Response), Interviews, Foreign Countries
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Strand, Pia; Edgren, Gudrun; Borna, Petter; Lindgren, Stefan; Wichmann-Hansen, Gitte; Stalmeijer, Renée E. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
The role of workplace supervisors in the clinical education of medical students is currently under debate. However, few studies have addressed how supervisors conceptualize workplace learning and how conceptions relate to current sociocultural workplace learning theory. We explored physician conceptions of: (a) medical student learning in the…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Clinical Experience, Learning, Organizational Culture
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van de Wiel, Margje W. J.; Van den Bossche, Piet; Janssen, Sandra; Jossberger, Helen – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2011
Medical professionals need to keep on learning as part of their everyday work to deliver high-quality health care. Although the importance of physicians' learning is widely recognized, few studies have investigated how they learn in the workplace. Based on insights from deliberate practice research, this study examined the activities physicians…
Descriptors: Physicians, Graduate Students, Medical Students, Workplace Learning
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Vanstone, Meredith; Watling, Christopher; Goldszmidt, Mark; Weijer, Charles; Lingard, Lorelei – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
A growing group of inpatients on acute clinical teaching units have non-acute needs, yet require attention by the team. While anecdotally, these patients have inspired frustration and resource pressures in clinical settings, little is known about the ways in which they influence physician perceptions of the learning environment. This qualitative…
Descriptors: Patients, Graduate Medical Education, Clinical Teaching (Health Professions), Physicians
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van der Zwet, J.; Zwietering, P. J.; Teunissen, P. W.; van der Vleuten, C. P. M.; Scherpbier, A. J. J. A. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2011
Workplace learning in undergraduate medical education has predominantly been studied from a cognitive perspective, despite its complex contextual characteristics, which influence medical students' learning experiences in such a way that explanation in terms of knowledge, skills, attitudes and single determinants of instructiveness is unlikely to…
Descriptors: Workplace Learning, Learning Theories, Medical Education, Medical Students
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Monrouxe, Lynn V.; Rees, Charlotte E. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Recent investigations into the UK National Health Service revealed doctors' failures to act with compassion and professionalism towards patients. The British media asked questions about what happens to students during their learning that influences such behaviour as doctors. We listened to 200 medical students' narratives of professionalism…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Interviews, Discourse Analysis, Content Analysis