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Self-entrustment: how trainees' self-regulated learning supports participation in the workplace
- Source :
- Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22, 4, pp. 931-949, Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22, 931-949, Advances in Health Sciences Education, Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22(4), 931-949. Springer, Cham, Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22(4), 931-949
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Item does not contain fulltext Clinical workplaces offer postgraduate trainees a wealth of opportunities to learn from experience. To promote deliberate and meaningful learning self-regulated learning skills are foundational. We explored trainees' learning activities related to patient encounters to better understand what aspects of self-regulated learning contribute to trainees' development, and to explore supervisor's role herein. We conducted a qualitative non-participant observational study in seven general practices. During two days we observed trainee's patient encounters, daily debriefing sessions and educational meetings between trainee and supervisor and interviewed them separately afterwards. Data collection and analysis were iterative and inspired by a phenomenological approach. To organise data we used networks, time-ordered matrices and codebooks. Self-regulated learning supported trainees to increasingly perform independently. They engaged in self-regulated learning before, during and after encounters. Trainees' activities depended on the type of medical problem presented and on patient, trainee and supervisor characteristics. Trainees used their sense of confidence to decide if they could manage the encounter alone or if they should consult their supervisor. They deliberately used feedback on their performance and engaged in reflection. Supervisors appeared vital in trainees' learning by reassuring trainees, discussing experience, knowledge and professional issues, identifying possible unawareness of incompetence, assessing performance and securing patient safety. Self-confidence, reflection and feedback, and support from the supervisor are important aspects of self-regulated learning in practice. The results reflect how self-regulated learning and self-entrustment promote trainees' increased participation in the workplace. Securing organized moments of interaction with supervisors is beneficial to trainees' self-regulated learning.
- Subjects :
- Male
CLINICAL EDUCATION
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
020205 medical informatics
General Practice
02 engineering and technology
MEDICAL-EDUCATION RESEARCH
0302 clinical medicine
BELIEFS
Pedagogy
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION
Medicine
030212 general & internal medicine
Workplace learning
Workplace
Medicine(all)
4. Education
Debriefing
Postgraduate training
General Medicine
Self Efficacy
ComputingMilieux_MANAGEMENTOFCOMPUTINGANDINFORMATIONSYSTEMS
Problem-based learning
Female
Clinical Competence
Patient Safety
Adult
Formative Feedback
Attitude of Health Personnel
education
Graduate medical education
HEALTH-PROFESSIONS
Education
Healthcare improvement science Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 18]
Formative assessment
03 medical and health sciences
Patient safety
Self-regulated learning
Meaningful learning
Qualitative observational research
GENERAL-PRACTICE
Supervisors
Humans
Self-efficacy
Original Paper
Medical education
business.industry
RESIDENTS LEARN
SUPERVISION
Problem-Based Learning
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Trainees
PERSPECTIVES
Education, Medical, Graduate
EXPERIENCE
business
GP training
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 13824996
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22, 4, pp. 931-949, Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22, 931-949, Advances in Health Sciences Education, Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22(4), 931-949. Springer, Cham, Advances in Health Sciences Education, 22(4), 931-949
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9c540f7f14918b89883bc9732a32fc6a