Cultural Historical Activity Theory for Studying Practice-Based Learning and Change in Medical Education

被引:8
作者
Qureshi, Shaun Peter [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, Palliat Med, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland
[2] Univ Edinburgh, Edinburgh Med Sch, Edinburgh EH16 4SB, Midlothian, Scotland
来源
ADVANCES IN MEDICAL EDUCATION AND PRACTICE | 2021年 / 12卷
关键词
cultural historical activity theory; activity systems analysis; medical education; methodology; Change Laboratory; STUDENTS PERCEPTIONS; UNDERGRADUATE; COMPLEXITY; WORK;
D O I
10.2147/AMEP.S313250
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Cultural historical activity theory (CHAT) is a social theory which is useful as a methodological framework for the vital task of studying practice-based learning in complex learning environments. CHAT is an apparatus considering learning as occurring through practice, through collective activity, and mediated by culturally specific instruments. Because CHAT is increasingly drawn upon in medical education academia, it is necessary for medical educationalists to be familiar with this theory. This methodology article explains how CHAT theorizes learning in dynamic workplaces within an activity system comprising multiple practitioners engaged in activity, which is collaborative, multi-voiced, and bounded by a shared intended object. It provides an accessible overview of the central concepts within CHAT and a description of a methodological strategy (activity system analysis) to incorporate CHAT into one's own work. CHAT also theorizes where tensions lie within and between activity systems, causing difficulties in achieving the intended object, defining such tensions as contradictions. It is through the overcoming of past contradictions that activity has come to exist in its current form, abiding by social norms of the present time, and CHAT allows consideration of how practice within a system may be changed through resolution of contradictions. For example, the Change Laboratory is a contrived intervention where practitioners consciously contribute to developing and embedding new, improved ways of practicing using CHAT principles. This allows practitioners to have agency in improving their own areas of learning and practice. Throughout this article, examples are provided of how CHAT has been usefully applied to various aspects of medical education research, including undergraduate education, postgraduate education, and continuous professional development. By building on the introduction to CHAT provided in this article, the reader can start to use CHAT methodologically to describe complexity, identify practice-based contradictions, and develop improved forms of practice-based learning, in his/her own context.
引用
收藏
页码:923 / 935
页数:13
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