"继往开来":深入探究兽医课程领导者专业身份的形成:叙事调查

E. Armitage-Chan, Melinda A Bell, Martin Cake, Kate A. Cobb, H. Janicke, Sarah Kelly, Emma Read, Sheena M. Warman
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摘要

课程负责人(负责院校兽医课程的个人)以学生为本,希望有所作为,在工作中优先考虑教学和教学法。然而,他们在努力加强课程开发的同时,也经历了角色的紧张。本研究以先前的定量研究结果为基础,旨在进一步探讨课程领导者如何应对紧张关系,以及他们的身份是如何构建和支持的,从而使他们能够在自己的角色中茁壮成长。以自我决定理论和叙事认同为概念框架,对九位课程领导者进行了访谈,了解他们的经历。通过叙事调查方法,对身份的影响因素以及参与者对冲突和不和谐的反应进行了深入解读。课程领导者的身份被定义为以学生为中心、以变革为导向、重视临床(尤其是全科实践)和教学专业知识,同时通过辛勤工作和服务来实现教学目标。学员们善于领导变革,并为此发展了技能和个人特质。领导变革涉及到对个人有意义的冲突和紧张经历,唤起了身份失调的感觉,这种感觉的特点是要么情绪坚韧,要么不满和沮丧。这种反应取决于社会身份的影响,包括与志同道合的同行建立联系的机会、有影响力的其他人对成就的认可、机构对变革的倡导以及对高级教学培训的支持。
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“Going From Strength to Strength”: Delving into Professional Identity Formation of Veterinary Curriculum Leaders: A Narrative Inquiry
Curriculum leaders (individuals with responsibility for an institution's veterinary curriculum), are student-oriented, want to make a difference, and prioritize teaching and pedagogy in their work. However, as they work to enhance curriculum development, they experience tensions in their role. This study built on previous quantitative findings, and aimed to explore further how curriculum leaders respond to tensions, and how their identity is constructed and supported in a way that means they can thrive in their role. Using self-determination theory and narrative identity as conceptual frameworks, nine curriculum leaders were interviewed about their experiences. Narrative inquiry methodology enabled in-depth interpretations to be drawn about identity influences and participants’ responses to conflict and dissonance. Curriculum leader identity was defined as being student-centered, change-oriented, valuing both clinical (particularly general practice), and pedagogical expertise while engaging in hard work and service to achieve pedagogical goals. Participants were skilled in leading change and had developed skills and personal attributes for this. Leading change involved experiences of conflict and tension that were personally meaningful, evoking feelings of identity dissonance that were characterised by either emotional resilience or disaffection and frustration. This response depended on social identity influences, including opportunities to network with like-minded peers, recognition of achievements from influential others, institutional advocacy for change, and support for advanced pedagogical training.
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