Re-visioning Academic Medicine Through a Constructionist Lens

被引:119
作者
Rees, Charlotte E. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Crampton, Paul E. S. [4 ]
Monrouxe, Lynn V. [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Monash Univ, Fac Med Nursing & Hlth Sci, Monash Ctr Scholarship Hlth Educ, Clayton, Vic, Australia
[2] Monash Univ, Fac Med Nursing & Hlth Sci, Curriculum Med, Clayton, Vic, Australia
[3] Murdoch Univ, Coll Sci Hlth Engn & Educ SHEE, Res & Innovat, Murdoch, WA, Australia
[4] Hull York Med Sch, Educ Unit, York, Yorkshire, England
[5] Univ Sydney, Fac Hlth Sci, Work Integrated Learning, Lidcombe, NSW, Australia
[6] Univ Sydney, Fac Med & Hlth, Sch Hlth Sci, Work Integrated Learning, Camperdown, NSW, Australia
关键词
SOCIAL CONSTRUCTIONISM;
D O I
10.1097/ACM.0000000000003109
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Constructionism in academic medicine matters. It encourages educators and researchers to question taken-for-granted assumptions, paying close attention to socially and historically contingent meanings. In this Invited Commentary, the authors explain what constructionism is; examine its ontological, epistemological, and axiological underpinnings; and outline its common methodologies and methods. Although constructivism favors the individual, constructionism privileges the social as the controlling force behind the construction of meaning. Where micro-constructionism attends to the minutiae of language, macro-constructionism focuses on broader discourses reproduced through material and social practices and structures. While social constructionists might situate themselves at any point on the relativist-realist continuum, many constructionists focus on constructionism as epistemology (the nature of knowledge) rather than ontology (the nature of reality). From an epistemological standpoint, constructionism asserts that how we come to know the world is constructed through social interaction. Constructionism thus values language, dialogue, and context, in addition to internal coherence between epistemology, methodology, and methods. Constructionism similarly values the concepts of dependability, authenticity, credibility, confirmability, reflexivity, and transferability. It also embraces the researcher-researched relationship. Given the privileging of language, qualitative methodologies and methods are key in constructionism, with constructionist-type questions focusing on how people speak. Here, the authors encourage the reader to develop an understanding of constructionism to re-vision academic medicine through a constructionist lens.
引用
收藏
页码:846 / 850
页数:5
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