4.6 Article

How Trainees Come to Trust Supervisors in Workplace-Based Assessment: A Grounded Theory Study

Journal

ACADEMIC MEDICINE
Volume 97, Issue 5, Pages 704-710

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004501

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ANZCA Research Foundation
  2. Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists [17/031]

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In workplace-based assessment, the behavior of trainees is influenced by the invitation and trustworthiness of supervisors. Supervisors' trust and investment in trainee development can encourage trainees to authentically engage and take risks, creating assessment for learning.
Purpose In competency-based medical education, workplace-based assessment provides trainees with an opportunity for guidance and supervisors the opportunity to judge the trainees' clinical practice. Learning from assessment is enhanced when trainees reveal their thinking and are open to critique, which requires trust in the assessor. If supervisors knew more about how trainees come to trust them in workplace-based assessment, they could better engender trainee trust and improve trainees' learning experience. Method From August 2018 to September 2019, semistructured interviews were conducted with 17 postgraduate anesthesia trainees across Australia and New Zealand. The transcripts were analyzed using constructivist grounded theory methods sensitized by a sociocultural view of learning informed by Wenger's communities of practice theory. Results Participants described a continuum from a necessary initial trust to an experience-informed dynamic trust. Trainees assumed initial trust in supervisors based on accreditation, reputation, and a perceived obligation of trustworthiness inherent in the supervisor's role. With experience and time, trainees' trust evolved based on supervisor actions. Deeper levels of trainee trust arose in response to perceived supervisor investment and allowed trainees to devote more emotional and cognitive resources to patient care and learning rather than impression management. Across the continuum from initial trust to experience-informed trust, trainees made rapid trust judgments that were not preceded by conscious deliberation; instead, they represented a learned feel for the game. Conclusions While other factors are involved, our results indicate that the trainee behavior observed in workplace-based assessment is a product of supervisor invitation. Supervisor trustworthiness and investment in trainee development invite trainees to work and present in authentic ways in workplace-based assessment. This authentic engagement, where learners show themselves to supervisors and take risks, creates assessment for learning.

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