1. From critic to inspirer: four profiles reveal the belief system and commitment to educational mission of medical academics
- Author
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Neil Gesundheit, Willem J. J. Assendelft, Anneke W. M. Kramer, Roeland M. van der Rijst, Friedo W. Dekker, Albert J. J. A. Scherpbier, Lianne N. van Staveren, Marleen W. Ottenhoff de Jonge, Fac. Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, RS: SHE - R1 - Research (OvO), and Onderwijs instituut FHML
- Subjects
Male ,Value (ethics) ,020205 medical informatics ,Teaching beliefs ,lcsh:Medicine ,Identity (social science) ,02 engineering and technology ,Teacher qualities ,Professional Competence ,0302 clinical medicine ,Conceptions of teaching and learning ,Pedagogy ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Cluster Analysis ,INTERVIEWS ,Teacher attributes ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Qualitative Research ,lcsh:LC8-6691 ,Class (computer programming) ,Education, Medical ,Professional development ,General Medicine ,Teacher identity ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Teacher profiles ,SATURATION ,Female ,Curriculum ,Faculty development ,Psychology ,Research Article ,Theme (narrative) ,Adult ,Medical education ,Faculty, Medical ,Teacher mission ,Context (language use) ,Education ,Healthcare improvement science Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 18] ,Interviews as Topic ,03 medical and health sciences ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,TEACHER ,Humans ,CONCEPTIONS ,ENVIRONMENT ,lcsh:Special aspects of education ,lcsh:R ,United States ,CONTEXT ,IDENTITY ,Total Quality Management - Abstract
Background: The educational beliefs of medical academics influence how they act in class and thus influence student learning. One component of these are beliefs academics hold about the qualities of teachers themselves. These teacher qualities range from behaviours and competencies to more personal attributes such as the teacher's identity and mission. However, it is unclear what medical academics believe to be key teacher qualities. Therefore, this study explored the variety of medical academics' beliefs about 'teacher qualities', aiming to identify and characterise profiles of academics with similar beliefs.Methods: We interviewed 26 expert academics from two medical schools to explore their beliefs about teacher qualities. A concentric onion-model focusing on teacher qualities was used to analyse and categorise the data deductively. Within each theme we developed subthemes inductively. To gain insight into the variety of beliefs we then clustered the participants into teacher profiles according to the themes. To better understand each of the profiles we carried out a quantitative study of the differences between profiles regarding subthemes, contextual and personal factors, and analysed statistical significance using Fisher's exact- and Student's t-tests for categorical and continuous data, respectively.Results: Four profiles of medical academics were identified, corresponding to the most central theme that each participant had reflected on: the 'Inspirer', 'Role-model', 'Practitioner', and 'Critic'. The focus of the profiles varied from external constraining factors within the 'Critic' profile to affective personal qualities within the 'Role-model' and 'Inspirer' profiles. The profiles could be regarded as hierarchically ordered by inclusiveness. Educational institute was the only significant factor related to the profiles.Conclusions: Besides the relevance of affective teacher qualities, the 'Inspirer' profile demonstrates the importance of developing a clear mission as a teaching academic, centred around student learning and professional development. In our view, academics who inspire their students continue to be inspired themselves.The practical implications are described for faculty development programmes, and for the potential value of using these profiles within medical schools. In the discourse on educational beliefs, the authors argue that more attention should be paid to affective qualities, in particular to explicating the educational mission of academics.
- Published
- 2019