Putting on Academic Armor: How Black Physicians and Trainees Take Stances to Make Racism Visible Amid Publishing Constraints.

IF 2.1 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Teaching and Learning in Medicine Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-09 DOI:10.1080/10401334.2023.2215744
Monnique Johnson, Lauren A Maggio, Abigail Konopasky
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Abstract

Starting with reflexivity: As a Black woman medical student at a predominately white institution, a white woman full professor and deputy editor-in-chief of a journal, and a white woman associate professor with a deep interest in language, we understand that medicine and medical education interpellate each of us as a particular kind of subject. As such, we begin with a narrative grounding in our personal stances. Phenomenon: While there are a growing number of empirical studies of Black physicians' and trainees' experiences of racism, there are still few accounts from a first-person perspective. Black authors of these personal commentaries or editorials, who already experience microaggressions and racial trauma in their work spaces, must put on their academic armor to further experience them in publishing spaces. This study seeks to understand the stances Black physicians and trainees take as they share their personal experiences of racism. Approach: We searched four databases, identifying 29 articles authored by Black physicians and trainees describing their experiences. During initial analysis, we identified and coded for three sets of discursive strategies: identification, intertextuality, and space-time. Throughout the study, we reflected on our own stances in relation to the experience of conducting the study and its findings. Findings: Authors engaged in stance-taking, which aligned with the concept of donning academic armor, by evaluating and positioning themselves with respect to racism and the norms of academic discourse in response to ongoing conversations both within medicine and in the broader U.S. culture. They did this by (a) positioning themselves as being Black and, therefore, qualified to notice and name personal racist experiences while also aligning themselves with the reader through shared professional experiences and goals; (b) intertextual connections to other related events, people, and institutions that they-and their readers-value; and (c) aligning themselves with a hoped-for future rather than a racist present. Personal insights: Because the discourses of medicine and medical publishing interpellate Black authors as Others they must carefully consider the stances they take, particularly when naming racism. The academic armor they put on must be able to not only defend them from attack but also help them slip unseen through institutional bodies replete with mechanisms to eject them. In addition to analyzing our own personal stance, we leave readers with thought-provoking questions regarding this armor as we return to narrative grounding.

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Putting on Academic Armor: How Black Physicians and Trainees Take Stances to make Racism Visible Amid of Publishing Constraints.
从反思开始:作为一名在白人占主导地位的院校就读的黑人女医学生、一名白人女正职教授兼期刊副主编,以及一名对语言有着浓厚兴趣的白人女副教授,我们深知医学和医学教育将我们每个人诠释为一种特殊的主体。因此,我们从我们的个人立场开始叙述。现象:尽管对黑人医生和受训者的种族主义经历进行的实证研究越来越多,但从第一人称角度进行的叙述仍然很少。这些个人评论或社论的黑人作者在工作场所已经经历过微词和种族创伤,他们必须穿上学术盔甲,在出版空间进一步体验这些微词和种族创伤。本研究试图了解黑人医生和受训人员在分享他们的种族主义个人经历时所采取的立场。研究方法我们搜索了四个数据库,确定了 29 篇由黑人医生和受训人员撰写的描述其经历的文章。在初步分析过程中,我们确定了三组话语策略并进行了编码:识别、互文性和时空。在整个研究过程中,我们反思了自己与研究经历和研究结果相关的立场。研究结果:作者们根据医学界和更广泛的美国文化中正在进行的对话,对种族主义和学术话语规范进行了评估和定位,从而采取了与 "穿上学术盔甲 "这一概念相一致的立场。他们的做法是:(a) 将自己定位为黑人,因此有资格注意到并说出个人的种族主义经历,同时通过共同的职业经历和目标使自己与读者保持一致;(b) 将自己和读者重视的其他相关事件、人物和机构进行互文联系;(c) 使自己与希望的未来而非种族主义的现在保持一致。个人见解:由于医学和医学出版话语将黑人作者解释为 "他者",他们必须仔细考虑自己的立场,尤其是在指出种族主义时。他们所穿戴的学术盔甲不仅要能保护他们免受攻击,还要能帮助他们神不知鬼不觉地穿过充满排斥机制的机构。除了分析我们自己的个人立场之外,在回到叙事基础时,我们还为读者留下了有关这套盔甲的发人深省的问题。
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来源期刊
Teaching and Learning in Medicine
Teaching and Learning in Medicine 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
12.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Teaching and Learning in Medicine ( TLM) is an international, forum for scholarship on teaching and learning in the health professions. Its international scope reflects the common challenge faced by all medical educators: fostering the development of capable, well-rounded, and continuous learners prepared to practice in a complex, high-stakes, and ever-changing clinical environment. TLM''s contributors and readership comprise behavioral scientists and health care practitioners, signaling the value of integrating diverse perspectives into a comprehensive understanding of learning and performance. The journal seeks to provide the theoretical foundations and practical analysis needed for effective educational decision making in such areas as admissions, instructional design and delivery, performance assessment, remediation, technology-assisted instruction, diversity management, and faculty development, among others. TLM''s scope includes all levels of medical education, from premedical to postgraduate and continuing medical education, with articles published in the following categories:
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