Context matters: emergent variability in an effectiveness trial of online teaching modules

被引:44
作者
Ellaway, Rachel H. [1 ]
Pusic, Martin [2 ]
Yavner, Steve [2 ]
Kalet, Adina L. [2 ]
机构
[1] Northern Ontario Sch Med, Sudbury, ON P3E 2C6, Canada
[2] NYU, Sch Med, New York, NY USA
关键词
HEALTH-PROFESSIONS; EDUCATION; QUALITY;
D O I
10.1111/medu.12389
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 [教育学原理];
摘要
ContextConducting research in real life settings (effectiveness studies) can introduce many confounding factors. Efficacy studies seek to control for researcher bias and data quality rather than considering how the efficacy of an intervention is changed by the contexts in which it is used. Relatively little is known about the impact of context on educational interventions, in particular on multimedia learning. MethodsAn effectiveness study to understand implementation variance of online educational modules in surgery clerkships was conducted in six US medical schools participating in an efficacy trial of different multimedia designs. Student and teacher experiences were captured through focus groups and one-to-one interviews with trial participants and their teachers. Audio-recordings of these sessions were transcribed and analysed using grounded theory techniques. ResultsDifferences were identified in student and teacher perceptions of how the educational intervention had been implemented and how its uptake had been influenced by context-dependent factors: (i) the intervention was implemented in different ways to suit different educational contexts and this influenced how students and teachers responded to it; (ii) the ways students and teachers interacted with, and behaved around, the intervention influenced its uptake; (iii) the way the intervention was perceived by students and teachers influenced its uptake; and (iv) the medium and design of the intervention had a directing influence on its uptake. ConclusionsIt was observed that each institutional context formed a complex educational ecology. The intervention became interwoven with different educational ecologies so that it could no longer be considered a stable variable across the study. We suggest that researchers should conduct implementation-profiling studies in advance of any intervention-based research to account for the constructing nature of educational ecologies on their interventions and in doing so to more clearly differentiate between efficacy and effectiveness studies. Discuss ideas arising from the article at '
引用
收藏
页码:386 / 396
页数:11
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]
The place of inter-rater reliability in qualitative research: An empirical study [J].
Armstrong, D ;
Gosling, A ;
Weinman, J ;
Marteau, T .
SOCIOLOGY-THE JOURNAL OF THE BRITISH SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, 1997, 31 (03) :597-606
[2]
Berger Peter L., 1966, The social construction of reality: A treatise in the sociology of knowledge
[3]
Charmaz K., 2000, Handbook of Qualitative Research, P509
[4]
Charmaz K., 2011, Handbook of qualitative research, V4th, DOI DOI 10.4236/IB.2011.33031
[5]
Charmaz K., 2006, CONSTRUCTING GROUNDE
[6]
Pediatric Residents' Decision-Making Around Disclosing and Reporting Adverse Events: The Importance of Social Context [J].
Coffey, Maitreya ;
Thomson, Kelly ;
Tallett, Susan ;
Matlow, Anne .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2010, 85 (10) :1619-1625
[7]
Cohen L., 2018, RES METHODS ED, DOI [DOI 10.4324/9781315456539, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315456539]
[8]
The research we still are not doing: An agenda for the study of computer-based learning [J].
Cook, DA .
ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2005, 80 (06) :541-548
[9]
Internet-based learning in the health professions - A meta-analysis [J].
Cook, David A. ;
Levinson, Anthony J. ;
Garside, Sarah ;
Dupras, Denise M. ;
Erwin, Patricia J. ;
Montori, Victor M. .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2008, 300 (10) :1181-1196
[10]
Technology-Enhanced Simulation for Health Professions Education A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis [J].
Cook, David A. ;
Hatala, Rose ;
Brydges, Ryan ;
Zendejas, Benjamin ;
Szostek, Jason H. ;
Wang, Amy T. ;
Erwin, Patricia J. ;
Hamstra, Stanley J. .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2011, 306 (09) :978-988