为什么你的医生不去上课:对抗疗法医学院的学生文化、高风险测试和新型耦合配置。

IF 6.3 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Journal of Health and Social Behavior Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1177/00221465221118584
Judson G Everitt, James M Johnson, William H Burr
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引用次数: 1

摘要

美国对抗疗法医学院出现了一个明显的模式:大多数医学生不再去上课。虽然这种趋势在医学教育中是众所周知的,但迄今为止,很少有研究调查了推动这种集体行为的潜在社会学机制,或者这些动态与医学教育制度变革的关系。通过对一所对抗疗法医学院的33名医学生的深度访谈,我们研究了医学生文化及其在塑造医学生如何理解美国医学执照考试的制度化许可要求方面的作用。我们发现,在第一步准备中,医学生学会依赖课程内容的数字记录和第三方数字资源,并完全停止亲自参加学术课程。我们认为医学生通过他们的学生文化在本地互动和制度化许可规则之间创造了新的耦合配置。
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Why Your Doctor Didn't Go to Class: Student Culture, High-Stakes Testing, and Novel Coupling Configurations in an Allopathic Medical School.

A clear pattern has emerged in allopathic medical schools across the United States: Most medical students have stopped going to class. While this trend among students is well known in medical education, few studies to date have examined the underlying sociological mechanisms driving this collective behavior or how these dynamics are related to institutional change in medical education. Drawing on 33 in-depth interviews with medical students in an allopathic medical school, we examine medical student culture and its role in shaping how medical students make sense of the institutionalized licensing requirement of the United States Medical Licensing Exam. We find that medical students learn to rely on digital recordings of their course content and third-party digital resources for Step 1 prep and stop attending their academic courses in person altogether. We argue that medical students create novel coupling configurations between local interaction and institutionalized licensure rules via their student cultures.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.00%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: Journal of Health and Social Behavior is a medical sociology journal that publishes empirical and theoretical articles that apply sociological concepts and methods to the understanding of health and illness and the organization of medicine and health care. Its editorial policy favors manuscripts that are grounded in important theoretical issues in medical sociology or the sociology of mental health and that advance theoretical understanding of the processes by which social factors and human health are inter-related.
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