4.5 Article

Widening how we see the impact of culture on learning, practice and identity development in clinical environments

Journal

MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 56, Issue 1, Pages 110-116

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/medu.14630

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Research has shown that the focus on how health professionals learn in clinical workplace environments has been on the supervisor-trainee relationship and the affordances of the workplace, with less attention paid to the broader environment. It is important to recognize and acknowledge an organization's values and culture as they impact clinical learning, and to make tacit factors visible through reflection and observation.
As part of this State of the Science series on Self, Society and Situation, we focus on how we might see the situation of the workplace as a learning environment in the future. Research to date into how health professionals learn while working in clinical workplace environments has mostly focused on the supervisor-trainee relationship or on the interaction between the affordances of a workplace and the receptiveness of trainees. However, the wider environment has not received as much focus-though frequently mentioned, it is seldom investigated. We suggest there is a need to embrace the wider institution factors, recognise and acknowledge an organisation's values and culture as they impact on clinical learning in order to work with these, not around them or ignore them, to make what may be tacit visible through reflection and observation and to embrace a range of perspectives on culture.

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