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1.
J Allied Health ; 50(1): 67-72, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33646252

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: MLS curricula often focus on factual theory and skills-based competencies. Evolving practitioners also need professional reflection skills to continually improve. The problem giving rise to the need for this intervention was that learners were not reflecting on their practicum experiences beyond thinking of tasks completed. The purpose of this qualitative case was to explore learner insight that arose from writing professional reflections across clinical practica during a university-based MLS program. Two elaborating research questions asked what metacognitive insights MLS learners described in their reflections and how learners perceived their clinical practica experiences. DESIGN: The instrumental case is bounded by a 1-year MLS professional program in a Midwestern academic health science center that required the 2017-18 cohort of 43 students to complete graded, written reflections over clinical practicum experiences. METHODS: Data analyzed for this study included up to 21 reflections over an academic year for each of 25 learners, who were selected for analysis due to the richness of their written reflections. RESULTS: Based on iterative categorization, themes derived from the data included academic pace, technical dislikes, frustration, nervousness, identifying weaknesses, critical thinking and identifying technical errors, comfort, and embracing challenges. CONCLUSIONS: The study's practical implications for MLS educators are that learners need to be required to write reflections to promote deep learning.


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Preceptoria , Universidades , Currículo , Humanos , Pensamento , Redação
2.
Med Sci Educ ; 31(2): 795-804, 2021 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34457926

RESUMO

Completing a doctoral program is a daunting journey for any individual. Working full-time and juggling personal demands make the journey more complex. This monograph explores the unique motivations women who travel this path possess, identifies barriers in completion of a doctoral program for women, and tells the story of one group of women who developed a working model for a supportive writing group. As numbers of female health professions students and education leaders increase, institutions must identify mechanisms for support of women interested in pursuing an academic doctoral degree, preparing academic institutions for future diversity changes in health care.

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