J Educ Eval Health Prof.  2024;21(1):5. 10.3352/jeehp.2024.21.5.

Discovering social learning ecosystems during clinical clerkship from United States medical students’ feedback encounters: a content analysis

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Medical Education, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, IL, USA
  • 2Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
  • 3Division of Surgery, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, IL, USA

Abstract

Purpose
We examined United States medical students’ self-reported feedback encounters during clerkship training to better understand in situ feedback practices. Specifically, we asked: Who do students receive feedback from, about what, when, where, and how do they use it? We explored whether curricular expectations for preceptors’ written commentary aligned with feedback as it occurs naturalistically in the workplace.
Methods
This study occurred from July 2021 to February 2022 at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine. We used qualitative survey-based experience sampling to gather students’ accounts of their feedback encounters in 8 core specialties. We analyzed the who, what, when, where, and why of 267 feedback encounters reported by 11 clerkship students over 30 weeks. Code frequencies were mapped qualitatively to explore patterns in feedback encounters.
Results
Clerkship feedback occurs in patterns apparently related to the nature of clinical work in each specialty. These patterns may be attributable to each specialty’s “social learning ecosystem”—the distinctive learning environment shaped by the social and material aspects of a given specialty’s work, which determine who preceptors are, what students do with preceptors, and what skills or attributes matter enough to preceptors to comment on.
Conclusion
Comprehensive, standardized expectations for written feedback across specialties conflict with the reality of workplace-based learning. Preceptors may be better able—and more motivated—to document student performance that occurs as a natural part of everyday work. Nurturing social learning ecosystems could facilitate workplace-based learning such that, across specialties, students acquire a comprehensive clinical skillset appropriate for graduation.

Keyword

Ecosystem; Feedback; Medical students; Motivation; United States
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