To prove or improve? Examining how paradoxical tensions shape evaluation practices in accreditation contexts

IF 4.9 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Medical Education Pub Date : 2023-09-19 DOI:10.1111/medu.15218
Betty Onyura, Abigail J. Fisher, Qian Wu, Shrutikaa Rajkumar, Sarick Chapagain, Judith Nassuna, David Rojas, Latika Nirula
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Abstract

Introduction

Although programme evaluation is increasingly routinised across the academic health sciences, there is scant research on the factors that shape the scope and quality of evaluation work in health professions education. Our research addresses this gap, by studying how the context in which evaluation is practised influences the type of evaluation that can be conducted. Focusing on the context of accreditation, we critically examine the types of paradoxical tensions that surface as evaluation-leads consider evaluation ideals or best practices in relation to contextual demands associated with accreditation seeking.

Methods

Our methods were qualitative and situated within a critical realist paradigm. Study participants were 29 individuals with roles requiring responsibility and oversight on evaluation work. They worked across 4 regions, within 26 academic health science institutions. Data were collected using semi-structured interviews and analysed using framework and matrix analyses.

Results

We identified three overarching themes: (i) absence of collective coherence about evaluation practice, (ii) disempowerment of expertise and (iii) tensions as routine practice. Examples of these latter tensions in evaluation work included (i) resourcing accreditation versus resourcing robust evaluation strategy (performing paradox), (ii) evaluation designs to secure accreditation versus design to spur renewal and transformation (performing–learning paradox) and (iii) public dissemination of evaluation findings versus restricted or selective access (publicising paradox). Sub-themes and illustrative data are presented.

Discussion

Our study demonstrates how the high-stakes context of accreditation seeking surfaces tensions that can risk the quality and credibility of evaluation practices. To mitigate these risks, those who commission or execute evaluation work must be able to identify and reconcile these tensions. We propose strategies that may help optimise the quality of evaluation work alongside accreditation-seeking efforts. Critically, our research highlights the limitations of continually positioning evaluation purely as a method versus as a socio-technical practice that is highly vulnerable to contextual influences.

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证明还是改进?研究矛盾的紧张关系如何影响认证环境中的评估实践。
引言:尽管项目评估越来越多地在学术健康科学中进行,但对影响卫生专业教育评估工作范围和质量的因素研究很少。我们的研究通过研究实施评估的背景如何影响可以进行的评估类型来解决这一差距。专注于认证的背景,我们批判性地研究了当评估领导考虑与寻求认证相关的背景需求相关的评估理想或最佳实践时,出现的矛盾紧张关系的类型。方法:我们的方法是定性的,并处于批判现实主义范式中。研究参与者为29人,他们的角色需要对评估工作负责和监督。他们在26个学术健康科学机构的4个地区开展工作。使用半结构化访谈收集数据,并使用框架和矩阵分析进行分析。结果:我们确定了三个总体主题:(i)评估实践缺乏集体一致性,(ii)专业知识的权力被剥夺,以及(iii)作为常规实践的紧张关系。评估工作中后一种紧张关系的例子包括(i)资源认证与资源稳健评估策略(执行悖论),(ii)确保认证的评估设计与激励更新和转型的设计(执行学习悖论)以及(iii)公开传播评估结果与限制或选择性访问(宣传悖论)。介绍了分主题和说明性数据。讨论:我们的研究表明,寻求认证的高风险背景如何暴露出可能危及评估实践质量和可信度的紧张关系。为了减轻这些风险,委托或执行评估工作的人员必须能够识别和调和这些紧张关系。我们提出的策略可能有助于优化评估工作的质量,同时寻求认证。至关重要的是,我们的研究强调了持续将评估纯粹定位为一种方法与社会技术实践的局限性,后者极易受到上下文影响。
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来源期刊
Medical Education
Medical Education 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
279
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Education seeks to be the pre-eminent journal in the field of education for health care professionals, and publishes material of the highest quality, reflecting world wide or provocative issues and perspectives. The journal welcomes high quality papers on all aspects of health professional education including; -undergraduate education -postgraduate training -continuing professional development -interprofessional education
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