New ways of seeing: supplementing existing competency framework development guidelines with systems thinking

被引:0
作者
Alan M. Batt
Brett Williams
Madison Brydges
Matthew Leyenaar
Walter Tavares
机构
[1] Monash University,Department of Paramedicine
[2] McNally Project for Paramedicine Research,Department of Health
[3] Fanshawe College,Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
[4] Ageing and Society,The Wilson Centre, Department of Medicine
[5] McMaster University,Post‑MD Education (Post‑Graduate Medical Education/Continued Professional Development)
[6] McMaster University,undefined
[7] University of Toronto/University Health Network,undefined
[8] University of Toronto,undefined
来源
Advances in Health Sciences Education | 2021年 / 26卷
关键词
Competency; Competency framework; CBME; Medical education;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Competency frameworks provide a link between professional practice, education, training, and assessment. They support and inform downstream processes such as curriculum design, assessment, accreditation and professional accountability. However, existing guidelines are limited in accounting for the complexities of professional practice potentially undermining utility of such guidelines and validity of outcomes. This necessitates additional ways of “seeing” situated and context-specific practice. We highlight what a conceptual framework informed by systems thinking can offer when developing competency frameworks. Mirroring shifts towards systems thinking in program evaluation and quality improvement, we suggest that similar approaches that identify and make use of the role and influence of system features and contexts can provide ways of augmenting existing guidelines when developing competency frameworks. We framed a systems thinking approach in two ways. First using an adaptation of Ecological Systems Theory which offers a realist perspective of the person and environment, and the evolving interaction between the two. Second, by employing complexity thinking, which obligates attention to the relationships and influences of features within the system, we can explore the multiple complex, unique, and context-embedded problems that exist within and have stake in real-world practice settings. The ability to represent clinical practice when developing competency frameworks can be improved when features that may be relevant, including their potential interactions, are identified and understood. A conceptual framework informed by systems thinking makes visible features of a practice in context that may otherwise be overlooked when developing competency frameworks using existing guidelines.
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页码:1355 / 1371
页数:16
相关论文
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