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Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique

PURPOSE: Today's students have distinctive generational characteristics and increased psychopathology and generational tension. The authors investigated the negative experiences of Late Millennial students in medical school to draw implications for student support. METHODS: The authors explored...

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Autores principales: Roh, HyeRin, Yune, So Jung, Park, Kwi Hwa, Lee, Geon Ho, Jung, Sung Soo, Chun, Kyung Hee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Society of Medical Education 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7481051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32723986
http://dx.doi.org/10.3946/kjme.2020.167
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author Roh, HyeRin
Yune, So Jung
Park, Kwi Hwa
Lee, Geon Ho
Jung, Sung Soo
Chun, Kyung Hee
author_facet Roh, HyeRin
Yune, So Jung
Park, Kwi Hwa
Lee, Geon Ho
Jung, Sung Soo
Chun, Kyung Hee
author_sort Roh, HyeRin
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Today's students have distinctive generational characteristics and increased psychopathology and generational tension. The authors investigated the negative experiences of Late Millennial students in medical school to draw implications for student support. METHODS: The authors explored medical students’ negative experiences using the critical incident technique. The authors conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews with 13 medical students, between February and May 2016. The authors focused on occurrences that significantly influenced medical students’ school lives negatively from the students’ perspective. All interviews were recorded and transcribed. The authors classified incidents into frames of reference for the use of faculty development for student support. RESULTS: The authors extracted 22 themes from a total 334 codes and classified them into eight subcategories. Finally, four categories emerged from frames of reference. Students manipulate relationships and colluding for better specialty choice. They experience uncontrolled rifts in interpersonal relationships between peers including lawsuits, sexual assaults, and social network service conflicts. Today’s students feel resentment towards dependent hierarchical relationships with seniors. They struggle with gender discrimination but perpetuate outdated gender role toward the opposite gender. CONCLUSION: Faculty members should understand today’s students’ level of career stress and desire for work life balance. They should motivate students’ professional identity, promote assertiveness against unfair authorities, and focus on mental health, teamwork, and relationship building. All generations need to understand other generations and develop appropriate leadership and gender sensitivity.
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spelling pubmed-74810512020-09-17 Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique Roh, HyeRin Yune, So Jung Park, Kwi Hwa Lee, Geon Ho Jung, Sung Soo Chun, Kyung Hee Korean J Med Educ Original Research PURPOSE: Today's students have distinctive generational characteristics and increased psychopathology and generational tension. The authors investigated the negative experiences of Late Millennial students in medical school to draw implications for student support. METHODS: The authors explored medical students’ negative experiences using the critical incident technique. The authors conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews with 13 medical students, between February and May 2016. The authors focused on occurrences that significantly influenced medical students’ school lives negatively from the students’ perspective. All interviews were recorded and transcribed. The authors classified incidents into frames of reference for the use of faculty development for student support. RESULTS: The authors extracted 22 themes from a total 334 codes and classified them into eight subcategories. Finally, four categories emerged from frames of reference. Students manipulate relationships and colluding for better specialty choice. They experience uncontrolled rifts in interpersonal relationships between peers including lawsuits, sexual assaults, and social network service conflicts. Today’s students feel resentment towards dependent hierarchical relationships with seniors. They struggle with gender discrimination but perpetuate outdated gender role toward the opposite gender. CONCLUSION: Faculty members should understand today’s students’ level of career stress and desire for work life balance. They should motivate students’ professional identity, promote assertiveness against unfair authorities, and focus on mental health, teamwork, and relationship building. All generations need to understand other generations and develop appropriate leadership and gender sensitivity. Korean Society of Medical Education 2020-09 2020-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7481051/ /pubmed/32723986 http://dx.doi.org/10.3946/kjme.2020.167 Text en © The Korean Society of Medical Education. All rights reserved. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Roh, HyeRin
Yune, So Jung
Park, Kwi Hwa
Lee, Geon Ho
Jung, Sung Soo
Chun, Kyung Hee
Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique
title Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique
title_full Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique
title_fullStr Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique
title_full_unstemmed Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique
title_short Negative school experiences of Late Millennial Korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique
title_sort negative school experiences of late millennial korean medical students: a qualitative study using the critical incident technique
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7481051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32723986
http://dx.doi.org/10.3946/kjme.2020.167
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