A Cognitive Load Theory Perspective of the Undergraduate Anesthesia Curricula in South Africa.

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY Anesthesia and analgesia Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-24 DOI:10.1213/ANE.0000000000007033
Sandra Spijkerman, Dianne Mary Manning, Lionel Patrick Green-Thompson
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Abstract

Background: Safe anesthesia is indispensable to achieve global safe surgery and equitable health care access. The disease burden and lack of specialists in South Africa (SA) require junior, nonspecialist doctors to be fit-for-purpose from day 1 when they provide anesthetic services in peripheral hospitals with limited supervision. Graduating students report low self-perceived preparedness for administering anesthesia, but it is not known how their curricular experiences influence their learning. Cognitive load theory defines intrinsic, extraneous, and germane cognitive loads (subtypes). Intrinsic load relates to learning tasks, extraneous load to distractions, and germane load to students' learning processes. This study used a cognitive load theory lens to explore SA students' experiences of their undergraduate anesthesia training.

Methods: In a constructivist cross-sectional descriptive study, we explored the qualitative factors that influenced students' curricular experience of undergraduate anesthesia training in SA. Two investigators analyzed the data independently in an initial coding round. An emerging theme of lack of time to achieve the expected outcomes, prompted the use of cognitive load theory as a conceptual framework for further analysis by the 3 authors. The subsequent analysis informed the development and refinement of a final cognitive load theory framework for anesthesia training, the COLOAD (COgnitive LOad in Anesthesia eDucation) framework.

Results: Data were collected between November 2017 and February 2019. The 1336 respondents (79% participation) reported a variety of determinants of learning pertaining to all 3 cognitive load subtypes. Participants were novices in an inherently complex environment and experienced a high cognitive load during anesthesia training. The number-, complexity-, and interactivity of tasks influenced intrinsic load, while extraneous load was affected by ineffective instructional methods, external- and internal distractors. Program design, metacognition, and learner motivation impacted germane load.

Conclusions: Cognitive load theory provided a useful theoretical basis for understanding students' curricular experiences. The COLOAD framework suggests a microlevel interrelatedness of the constituting elements of the 3 cognitive load subtypes. This has implications for curriculum design, pedagogy, and student support. Learning outcomes development and curriculum mapping are important to ensure a lean curriculum, but measures to enhance germane cognitive load might be equally important to achieve competence. Attention to the hidden curriculum and active promotion of reflective practice might reduce cognitive load in complex learning environments such as anesthesia training.

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认知负荷理论透视南非麻醉学本科课程。
背景:安全的麻醉是实现全球安全手术和公平医疗所不可或缺的。南非(SA)的疾病负担和专科医生匮乏要求初级非专科医生从第一天起就能胜任在外围医院提供麻醉服务,并接受有限的监督。即将毕业的学生报告说,他们自我感觉对实施麻醉的准备程度较低,但他们的课程经历如何影响他们的学习却不得而知。认知负荷理论定义了内在、外在和种属认知负荷(子类型)。内在负荷与学习任务有关,外在负荷与分心有关,种属负荷与学生的学习过程有关。本研究从认知负荷理论的角度来探讨南澳大学学生在本科麻醉培训中的体验:在一项建构主义横断面描述性研究中,我们探讨了影响南澳大利亚州学生本科麻醉培训课程体验的定性因素。两名调查人员在最初的一轮编码中对数据进行了独立分析。一个新出现的主题是缺乏实现预期结果的时间,这促使三位作者使用认知负荷理论作为进一步分析的概念框架。随后的分析为制定和完善最终的麻醉培训认知负荷理论框架--COLOAD(COgnitive LOad in Anesthesia eDucation)框架提供了依据:数据收集时间为 2017 年 11 月至 2019 年 2 月。1336名受访者(79%参与)报告了与所有3种认知负荷亚型相关的各种学习决定因素。参与者是在固有复杂环境中的新手,在麻醉培训期间经历了高认知负荷。任务的数量、复杂性和互动性影响了内在负荷,而无效的教学方法、外部和内部干扰因素则影响了外在负荷。程序设计、元认知和学习者的动机影响着内在负荷:认知负荷理论为理解学生的课程体验提供了有用的理论基础。COLOAD 框架表明,3 种认知负荷亚型的构成要素在微观层面上相互关联。这对课程设计、教学法和学生支持都有影响。学习成果的开发和课程规划对于确保精益课程非常重要,但加强相关认知负荷的措施对于提高能力可能同样重要。在麻醉培训等复杂的学习环境中,关注隐性课程并积极促进反思性实践可能会减轻认知负荷。
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来源期刊
Anesthesia and analgesia
Anesthesia and analgesia 医学-麻醉学
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
7.00%
发文量
817
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Anesthesia & Analgesia exists for the benefit of patients under the care of health care professionals engaged in the disciplines broadly related to anesthesiology, perioperative medicine, critical care medicine, and pain medicine. The Journal furthers the care of these patients by reporting the fundamental advances in the science of these clinical disciplines and by documenting the clinical, laboratory, and administrative advances that guide therapy. Anesthesia & Analgesia seeks a balance between definitive clinical and management investigations and outstanding basic scientific reports. The Journal welcomes original manuscripts containing rigorous design and analysis, even if unusual in their approach.
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