Embracing the future: Technological developments and sustainability in health professional education

IF 4.9 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Medical Education Pub Date : 2023-10-20 DOI:10.1111/medu.15257
Martin Pusic, Paul E. S. Crampton, Kevin W. Eva
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What will persist in our memories, however, is the lived experience of how quickly discussion about the technology seemed to become omnipresent, whether perusing the academic literature, listening to news reports or engaging in casual conversation with neighbours.</p><p>Most discussions about technology elicit varying degrees of fear and exhilaration. The rapid expansion of the perceived potential of generative artificial intelligence that ChatGPT prompted, however, led people to extremes in both regards. We harbour no doubt that the world has been made better for the development of this technology. At the same time, we do not think there should be any doubt that every action elicits a variety of reactions, some of which will be unintended and some of which will be harmful.</p><p>We cannot have a conversation, therefore, about technological advancement<span><sup>2</sup></span> and the future of health professional education without also having a conversation about sustainability. In that regard, we do not simply mean sustainability of technology itself; rather, we include the need to discuss how one conceptualises sustainability within the context of changing environmental, economic and social considerations that inherently shape health professional education.<span><sup>3</sup></span> There is often a perception that technological developments can foster efficient and sustainable ways to address challenges.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Even if that proves true to a degree, the growing demands on educational infrastructure, students, researchers and the quest for developing knowledge will create a race between development and sustainability that will continue to challenge our healthcare systems.</p><p>As a result, we curated the 2024 edition of the State of the Science series with a dual focus on technology and sustainability. We have titled it ‘Embracing the future’ not to imply that every change will be a good one (although this editorial comes exactly 10 years after a defence of fads that we continue to believe<span><sup>5</sup></span>). Rather, we see the title as a reminder that we have no choice but to grapple with finding the right, context-appropriate, balance between new opportunities and the dangers they create. Subthemes focus on what supports might be enabled and what supports are required for education, assessment, the workforce and education research. Within this array, a wide net is cast by considering topics such as the role of learning technologies,<span><sup>6, 7</sup></span> how models of medical competence should evolve,<span><sup>8</sup></span> the value of adopting ways of knowing that are broader than historical norms<span><sup>9, 10</sup></span> and how god-terms like ‘patient outcomes’ and ‘productivity’ threaten health professional education scholarship.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>Despite the variable focus, a common thread linking the perspectives in this issue is the centrality of the value of research data. That is, giving priority to purposefully collected observations of the world in service of developing new insights or refining and reinforcing old ones. Like waves jostling pebbles on a beach such that each loses its rough edges, successive iterations of research data collection serve to refine our theories and conceptualisations as they get rubbed one against the other. To remain sustainable, we need to move with the tide while each wave brings fresh challenges.</p><p>Thinking in these terms about embracing the future, it seems clear that in some domains, we are moving from an era of data scarcity to one of abundance and even excess.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Quantitative sample size calculations have generally been conducted to specify the smallest amount of data collection one could get away with while still mounting a credible argument for trustworthiness and generalisability. Now, we can often do studies with ALL the data relevant to a particular study population.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Qualitative researchers, for their part, have typically used notions of saturation, information power and sufficiency that also trade off feasibility with ambition. Now, masses of transcribed text can create a research substrate that either overwhelms the individual researcher or requires the use of technological developments that significantly alter the research process.<span><sup>14</sup></span></p><p>As alluded to above, such changes are eliciting feelings of fear, exhilaration or some mixture of both, dependent on who one talks to. Exhilaration tends to derive from the potential to address questions we have only been able to dream of addressing; fear tends to derive from worry about masses of data taking priority over well-established markers of methodological rigour, thereby undermining the scientific method. The super-abundance of data certainly carries the risk of misuse, but so too do all of our previous methods. Further, worries about sustainability of the scientific method are misplaced because there is no such thing as *the* scientific method.<span><sup>15</sup></span> As Michael Strevens has observed,</p><p>The argument Strevens goes on to delineate is that science has been remarkably sustainable because of its adherence, not to a particular method, but to what he calls the ‘Iron Rule of Scientific Explanation’. The rule states that, to participate in scientific discourse, an individual must—whatever their private or informal hypotheses, beliefs and biases—present for peer review new evidence to justify a revision in what we know.</p><p>The scientific journal, as a result, will continue to play a central role, providing a space for theorisation and discourse about empirical data. 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Our colleagues who wrote for this issue from the global South<span><sup>8</sup></span> or who represent an Indigenous perspective<span><sup>9</sup></span> know this only too well as they negotiate a world where all the scientific data seem to originate in the North, with serious implications for who ‘wins’ (i.e. who dominates the discourse). Unfortunately, there are multiple threats to sustainable practice that risk further inequities.</p><p>While the ebb and flow of health professional education scholarship will be altered by this sea change in data availability and distribution, innovative solutions are surfacing. Global partnerships and collaborations can ensure participation both in generating primary data and in presenting it to the scholarly community. Further, the peer review process might well be kept in balance through the development and judicious incorporation of AI and machine learning tools into the peer review workflow. Such optimism, however, demands that we continue to grapple with questions like those listed (in this editorial and focused upon throughout this special issue) if we are to effectively embrace the future.</p><p>In fact, perhaps the best guarantee of sustainability, despite an ever-changing health professional education landscape, is that we continue to be guided by the overarching scientific framework, continually investing effort to collect new observations in service of critically generating practical wisdom<span><sup>19</sup></span> rather than using new technology simply to produce more information faster.</p>","PeriodicalId":18370,"journal":{"name":"Medical Education","volume":"58 1","pages":"2-4"},"PeriodicalIF":4.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/medu.15257","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Education","FirstCategoryId":"95","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/medu.15257","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"教育学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Ten months ago, as of the moment this sentence is being written, ChatGPT was released to the public. Eight months ago, it was reported that over 100 million users had already engaged with the technology.1 That same month, 71 days after ChatGPT's release, Medical Education started receiving papers speculating on, and exploring, the potential of this remarkable tool to facilitate better health professional education. The list of eye-popping statistics illustrating its uptake is endless. What will persist in our memories, however, is the lived experience of how quickly discussion about the technology seemed to become omnipresent, whether perusing the academic literature, listening to news reports or engaging in casual conversation with neighbours.

Most discussions about technology elicit varying degrees of fear and exhilaration. The rapid expansion of the perceived potential of generative artificial intelligence that ChatGPT prompted, however, led people to extremes in both regards. We harbour no doubt that the world has been made better for the development of this technology. At the same time, we do not think there should be any doubt that every action elicits a variety of reactions, some of which will be unintended and some of which will be harmful.

We cannot have a conversation, therefore, about technological advancement2 and the future of health professional education without also having a conversation about sustainability. In that regard, we do not simply mean sustainability of technology itself; rather, we include the need to discuss how one conceptualises sustainability within the context of changing environmental, economic and social considerations that inherently shape health professional education.3 There is often a perception that technological developments can foster efficient and sustainable ways to address challenges.4 Even if that proves true to a degree, the growing demands on educational infrastructure, students, researchers and the quest for developing knowledge will create a race between development and sustainability that will continue to challenge our healthcare systems.

As a result, we curated the 2024 edition of the State of the Science series with a dual focus on technology and sustainability. We have titled it ‘Embracing the future’ not to imply that every change will be a good one (although this editorial comes exactly 10 years after a defence of fads that we continue to believe5). Rather, we see the title as a reminder that we have no choice but to grapple with finding the right, context-appropriate, balance between new opportunities and the dangers they create. Subthemes focus on what supports might be enabled and what supports are required for education, assessment, the workforce and education research. Within this array, a wide net is cast by considering topics such as the role of learning technologies,6, 7 how models of medical competence should evolve,8 the value of adopting ways of knowing that are broader than historical norms9, 10 and how god-terms like ‘patient outcomes’ and ‘productivity’ threaten health professional education scholarship.11

Despite the variable focus, a common thread linking the perspectives in this issue is the centrality of the value of research data. That is, giving priority to purposefully collected observations of the world in service of developing new insights or refining and reinforcing old ones. Like waves jostling pebbles on a beach such that each loses its rough edges, successive iterations of research data collection serve to refine our theories and conceptualisations as they get rubbed one against the other. To remain sustainable, we need to move with the tide while each wave brings fresh challenges.

Thinking in these terms about embracing the future, it seems clear that in some domains, we are moving from an era of data scarcity to one of abundance and even excess.12 Quantitative sample size calculations have generally been conducted to specify the smallest amount of data collection one could get away with while still mounting a credible argument for trustworthiness and generalisability. Now, we can often do studies with ALL the data relevant to a particular study population.13 Qualitative researchers, for their part, have typically used notions of saturation, information power and sufficiency that also trade off feasibility with ambition. Now, masses of transcribed text can create a research substrate that either overwhelms the individual researcher or requires the use of technological developments that significantly alter the research process.14

As alluded to above, such changes are eliciting feelings of fear, exhilaration or some mixture of both, dependent on who one talks to. Exhilaration tends to derive from the potential to address questions we have only been able to dream of addressing; fear tends to derive from worry about masses of data taking priority over well-established markers of methodological rigour, thereby undermining the scientific method. The super-abundance of data certainly carries the risk of misuse, but so too do all of our previous methods. Further, worries about sustainability of the scientific method are misplaced because there is no such thing as *the* scientific method.15 As Michael Strevens has observed,

The argument Strevens goes on to delineate is that science has been remarkably sustainable because of its adherence, not to a particular method, but to what he calls the ‘Iron Rule of Scientific Explanation’. The rule states that, to participate in scientific discourse, an individual must—whatever their private or informal hypotheses, beliefs and biases—present for peer review new evidence to justify a revision in what we know.

The scientific journal, as a result, will continue to play a central role, providing a space for theorisation and discourse about empirical data. That said, as we embrace the future of publication and the proliferation of the research enterprise, key questions with which we must continue to grapple include: How will scientific discourse change as research data become super-abundant and the portals for publication multiply? Does the resultant research become easier? Better? Or, paradoxically, does it threaten the sustainability of the scientific enterprise by virtue of watering down published content? One reason that these risks should be taken seriously is the potential for the increasing pace of evidence generation to outstrip the rate at which journals can supply thoughtful peer review.17, 18

Another risk that must be managed is what happens when the new abundance is mal-distributed, exacerbating existing inequity? Paraphrasing Deming, ‘She who has the best data wins’. Our colleagues who wrote for this issue from the global South8 or who represent an Indigenous perspective9 know this only too well as they negotiate a world where all the scientific data seem to originate in the North, with serious implications for who ‘wins’ (i.e. who dominates the discourse). Unfortunately, there are multiple threats to sustainable practice that risk further inequities.

While the ebb and flow of health professional education scholarship will be altered by this sea change in data availability and distribution, innovative solutions are surfacing. Global partnerships and collaborations can ensure participation both in generating primary data and in presenting it to the scholarly community. Further, the peer review process might well be kept in balance through the development and judicious incorporation of AI and machine learning tools into the peer review workflow. Such optimism, however, demands that we continue to grapple with questions like those listed (in this editorial and focused upon throughout this special issue) if we are to effectively embrace the future.

In fact, perhaps the best guarantee of sustainability, despite an ever-changing health professional education landscape, is that we continue to be guided by the overarching scientific framework, continually investing effort to collect new observations in service of critically generating practical wisdom19 rather than using new technology simply to produce more information faster.

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拥抱未来:卫生专业教育的技术发展和可持续性。
兴奋往往源于有可能解决我们梦寐以求的问题;恐惧则源于担心大量数据会优先于方法严谨性的既定标志,从而破坏科学方法。超级丰富的数据当然有被滥用的风险,但我们以前的所有方法也是如此。15 正如迈克尔-斯特雷文斯(Michael Strevens)所言,斯特雷文斯继续阐述的论点是,科学之所以具有显著的可持续性,是因为它坚持的不是某种特定的方法,而是他所谓的 "科学解释铁律"。该规则规定,要参与科学讨论,个人必须--无论其私人或非正式的假设、信仰和偏见如何--提交新的证据供同行评审,以证明对我们的认知进行修正是合理的。因此,科学杂志将继续发挥核心作用,为经验数据的理论化和讨论提供空间。因此,科学期刊将继续发挥核心作用,为实证数据的理论化和论述提供空间。尽管如此,在我们迎接未来的出版和研究事业的扩散时,我们必须继续努力解决的关键问题包括:随着研究数据的增加,科学论述将如何变化?当研究数据变得超级丰富、出版门户网站成倍增加时,科学话语将发生怎样的变化?由此产生的研究会变得更容易吗?变得更好?或者,矛盾的是,它是否会因为淡化发表的内容而威胁到科学事业的可持续性?必须认真对待这些风险的一个原因是,证据产生的速度越来越快,有可能超过期刊提供深思熟虑的同行评审的速度。套用戴明的话说,"谁拥有最好的数据,谁就赢了"。我们从全球南方8 或代表土著观点9 为本期撰稿的同事对此深有体会,因为他们在这个世界上谈判时,所有的科学数据似乎都来自北方,这对谁 "赢"(即谁主导话语权)产生了严重影响。不幸的是,可持续实践面临着多种威胁,有可能造成进一步的不平等。虽然卫生专业教育学术研究的起伏将因数据可用性和分布的巨大变化而改变,但创新的解决方案正在浮出水面。全球伙伴关系和合作可以确保参与原始数据的生成和向学术界展示。此外,通过开发人工智能和机器学习工具并明智地将其纳入同行评审工作流程,同行评审过程很可能会保持平衡。事实上,尽管卫生专业教育的形势瞬息万变,但可持续发展的最佳保障或许是我们继续以总体科学框架为指导,不断努力收集新的观察结果,以批判性地产生实用智慧19 ,而不是仅仅为了更快地生产更多信息而使用新技术。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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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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The need for critical and intersectional approaches to equity efforts in postgraduate medical education: A critical narrative review. When I say … neurodiversity paradigm. The transition to clerkshIps bootcamp: Innovative and flexible curriculum strategies post COVID-19 adaptation. Issue Information Empowering dental students' collaborative learning using peer assessment.
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