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Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions

INTRODUCTION: Self-regulated learning is a cyclical process of forethought, performance, and self-reflection that has been used as an assessment tool in medical education. No prior studies have evaluated SRL processes for answering multiple-choice questions (MCQs) and most evaluated one or two itera...

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Autores principales: Andrews, Mary A., Okuliar, Catherine A., Whelton, Sean A., Windels, Allison O., Kruse, Stacy R., Nachnani, Manesh G., Topol, Deborah A., McBee, Elexis C., Stein, Michael T., Singaraju, Raj C., Gao, Sam W., Oliver, David S., Mangal, Jed P., LaRochelle, Jeffrey S., Kelly, William F., DeZee, Kent J., Chen, H. Carrie, Artino, Anthony R., Hemmer, Paul A., Dong, Ting, Cleary, Timothy J., Durning, Steven J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ubiquity Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10573650/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37840648
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/pme.833
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author Andrews, Mary A.
Okuliar, Catherine A.
Whelton, Sean A.
Windels, Allison O.
Kruse, Stacy R.
Nachnani, Manesh G.
Topol, Deborah A.
McBee, Elexis C.
Stein, Michael T.
Singaraju, Raj C.
Gao, Sam W.
Oliver, David S.
Mangal, Jed P.
LaRochelle, Jeffrey S.
Kelly, William F.
DeZee, Kent J.
Chen, H. Carrie
Artino, Anthony R.
Hemmer, Paul A.
Dong, Ting
Cleary, Timothy J.
Durning, Steven J.
author_facet Andrews, Mary A.
Okuliar, Catherine A.
Whelton, Sean A.
Windels, Allison O.
Kruse, Stacy R.
Nachnani, Manesh G.
Topol, Deborah A.
McBee, Elexis C.
Stein, Michael T.
Singaraju, Raj C.
Gao, Sam W.
Oliver, David S.
Mangal, Jed P.
LaRochelle, Jeffrey S.
Kelly, William F.
DeZee, Kent J.
Chen, H. Carrie
Artino, Anthony R.
Hemmer, Paul A.
Dong, Ting
Cleary, Timothy J.
Durning, Steven J.
author_sort Andrews, Mary A.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Self-regulated learning is a cyclical process of forethought, performance, and self-reflection that has been used as an assessment tool in medical education. No prior studies have evaluated SRL processes for answering multiple-choice questions (MCQs) and most evaluated one or two iterations of a non-MCQ task. SRL assessment during MCQs may elucidate reasons why learners are successful or not on these questions that are encountered repeatedly during medical education. METHODS: Internal medicine clerkship students at three institutions participated in a SRL microanalytic protocol that targeted strategic planning, metacognitive monitoring, causal attributions, and adaptive inferences across seven MCQs. Responses were transcribed and coded according to previously published methods for microanalytic protocols. RESULTS: Forty-four students participated. In the forethought phase, students commonly endorsed prioritizing relevant features as their diagnostic strategy (n = 20, 45%) but few mentioned higher-order diagnostic reasoning processes such as integrating clinical information (n = 5, 11%) or comparing/contrasting diagnoses (n = 0, 0%). However, in the performance phase, students’ metacognitive processes included high frequencies of integration (n = 38, 86%) and comparing/contrasting (n = 24, 55%). In the self-reflection phase, 93% (n = 41) of students faulted their management reasoning and 84% (n = 37) made negative references to their abilities. Less than 10% (n = 4) of students indicated that they would adapt their diagnostic reasoning process for these questions. DISCUSSION: This study describes in detail student self-regulatory processes during MCQs. We found that students engaged in higher-order diagnostic reasoning processes but were not explicit about it and seldom reflected critically on these processes after selecting an incorrect answer. Self-reflections focused almost exclusively on management reasoning and negative references to abilities which may decrease self-efficacy. Encouraging students to identify and evaluate diagnostic reasoning processes and make attributions to controllable factors may improve performance.
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spelling pubmed-105736502023-10-14 Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions Andrews, Mary A. Okuliar, Catherine A. Whelton, Sean A. Windels, Allison O. Kruse, Stacy R. Nachnani, Manesh G. Topol, Deborah A. McBee, Elexis C. Stein, Michael T. Singaraju, Raj C. Gao, Sam W. Oliver, David S. Mangal, Jed P. LaRochelle, Jeffrey S. Kelly, William F. DeZee, Kent J. Chen, H. Carrie Artino, Anthony R. Hemmer, Paul A. Dong, Ting Cleary, Timothy J. Durning, Steven J. Perspect Med Educ Original Research INTRODUCTION: Self-regulated learning is a cyclical process of forethought, performance, and self-reflection that has been used as an assessment tool in medical education. No prior studies have evaluated SRL processes for answering multiple-choice questions (MCQs) and most evaluated one or two iterations of a non-MCQ task. SRL assessment during MCQs may elucidate reasons why learners are successful or not on these questions that are encountered repeatedly during medical education. METHODS: Internal medicine clerkship students at three institutions participated in a SRL microanalytic protocol that targeted strategic planning, metacognitive monitoring, causal attributions, and adaptive inferences across seven MCQs. Responses were transcribed and coded according to previously published methods for microanalytic protocols. RESULTS: Forty-four students participated. In the forethought phase, students commonly endorsed prioritizing relevant features as their diagnostic strategy (n = 20, 45%) but few mentioned higher-order diagnostic reasoning processes such as integrating clinical information (n = 5, 11%) or comparing/contrasting diagnoses (n = 0, 0%). However, in the performance phase, students’ metacognitive processes included high frequencies of integration (n = 38, 86%) and comparing/contrasting (n = 24, 55%). In the self-reflection phase, 93% (n = 41) of students faulted their management reasoning and 84% (n = 37) made negative references to their abilities. Less than 10% (n = 4) of students indicated that they would adapt their diagnostic reasoning process for these questions. DISCUSSION: This study describes in detail student self-regulatory processes during MCQs. We found that students engaged in higher-order diagnostic reasoning processes but were not explicit about it and seldom reflected critically on these processes after selecting an incorrect answer. Self-reflections focused almost exclusively on management reasoning and negative references to abilities which may decrease self-efficacy. Encouraging students to identify and evaluate diagnostic reasoning processes and make attributions to controllable factors may improve performance. Ubiquity Press 2023-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10573650/ /pubmed/37840648 http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/pme.833 Text en Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
Andrews, Mary A.
Okuliar, Catherine A.
Whelton, Sean A.
Windels, Allison O.
Kruse, Stacy R.
Nachnani, Manesh G.
Topol, Deborah A.
McBee, Elexis C.
Stein, Michael T.
Singaraju, Raj C.
Gao, Sam W.
Oliver, David S.
Mangal, Jed P.
LaRochelle, Jeffrey S.
Kelly, William F.
DeZee, Kent J.
Chen, H. Carrie
Artino, Anthony R.
Hemmer, Paul A.
Dong, Ting
Cleary, Timothy J.
Durning, Steven J.
Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions
title Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions
title_full Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions
title_fullStr Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions
title_full_unstemmed Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions
title_short Using Self-Regulated Learning Microanalysis to Examine Regulatory Processes in Clerkship Students Engaged in Practice Questions
title_sort using self-regulated learning microanalysis to examine regulatory processes in clerkship students engaged in practice questions
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10573650/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37840648
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/pme.833
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