Engagement: what is it good for? The role of learner engagement in healthcare simulation contexts

被引:0
作者
Jessica Padgett
Sayra Cristancho
Lorelei Lingard
Richard Cherry
Faizal Haji
机构
[1] York University,Department of Psychology
[2] Western University,undefined
来源
Advances in Health Sciences Education | 2019年 / 24卷
关键词
Education; Engagement; Healthcare Learners; Instructional Design; Simulation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Learner engagement matters, particularly in simulation-based education. Indeed, it has been argued that instructional design only matters in the service of engaging learners in a simulation encounter. Yet despite its purported importance, our understanding of what engagement is, how to define it, how to measure it, and how to assess it is limited. The current study presents the results of a critical narrative review of literature outside of health sciences education, with the aim of summarizing existing knowledge in these areas and providing a research agenda to guide future scholarship on learner engagement in healthcare simulation. Building on this existing knowledge base, we provide a working definition for engagement and provide an outline for future research programs that will help us better understand how health professions’ learners experience engagement in the simulated setting. With this in hand, additional research questions can be addressed including: how do simulation instructional design features (fidelity, range of task difficulty, feedback, etc.) affect engagement? What is the relationship between engagement and simulation learning outcomes? And how is engagement related to or distinct from related variables like cognitive load, motivation, and self-regulated learning?
引用
收藏
页码:811 / 825
页数:14
相关论文
共 210 条
[1]  
Ainley M(2006)Connecting with learning: Motivation, affect and cognition in interest processes Educational Psychology Review 18 391-405
[2]  
Artino AR(2012)‘Media will never influence learning’: But will simulation? Medical Education 46 630-632
[3]  
Durning SJ(2015)Defining and measuring engagement and learning in science: Conceptual, theoretical, methodological, and analytical issues Educational Psychologist 50 84-94
[4]  
Azevedo R(2017)The meaning, antecedents and outcomes of employee engagement: A narrative synthesis International Journal of Management Reviews 19 31-53
[5]  
Bailey C(2008)Work engagement: An emerging concept in occupational health psychology Work and Stress 22 187-200
[6]  
Madden A(2016)Impact of a paper vs virtual simulated patient case on student-perceived confidence and engagement American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education 80 16-400
[7]  
Alfes K(1997)Writing narrative literature reviews Review of General Psychology 1 311-83
[8]  
Fletcher L(2003)Interactive simulated patient: Experiences with collaborative e-learning in medicine Journal of Educational Computing Research 29 387-61
[9]  
Bakker AB(2016)Engagement as an inherent aspect of the learning process Learning and Instruction 43 76-362
[10]  
Schaufeli WB(2003)Direct measurement of cognitive load in multimedia learning Educational Psychologist 38 53-7