TY - JOUR
T1 - Key elements in assessing the educational environment
T2 - where is the theory?
AU - Schonrock-Adema, Johanna
AU - Bouwkamp-Timmer, Tineke
AU - van Hell, Elisabeth A
AU - Cohen - Schotanus, Janke
PY - 2012/12
Y1 - 2012/12
N2 - The educational environment has been increasingly acknowledged as vital for high-quality medical education. As a result, several instruments have been developed to measure medical educational environment quality. However, there appears to be no consensus about which concepts should be measured. The absence of a theoretical framework may explain this lack of consensus. Therefore, we aimed to (1) find a comprehensive theoretical framework defining the essential concepts, and (2) test its applicability. An initial review of the medical educational environment literature indicated that such frameworks are lacking. Therefore, we chose an alternative approach to lead us to relevant frameworks from outside the medical educational field; that is, we applied a snowballing technique to find educational environment instruments used to build the contents of the medical ones and investigated their theoretical underpinnings (Study 1). We found two frameworks, one of which was described as incomplete and one of which defines three domains as the key elements of human environments (personal development/goal direction, relationships, and system maintenance and system change) and has been validated in different contexts. To test its applicability, we investigated whether the items of nine medical educational environment instruments could be mapped unto the framework (Study 2). Of 374 items, 94% could: 256 (68%) pertained to a single domain, 94 (25%) to more than one domain. In our context, these domains were found to concern goal orientation, relationships and organization/regulation. We conclude that this framework is applicable and comprehensive, and recommend using it as theoretical underpinning for medical educational environment measures.
AB - The educational environment has been increasingly acknowledged as vital for high-quality medical education. As a result, several instruments have been developed to measure medical educational environment quality. However, there appears to be no consensus about which concepts should be measured. The absence of a theoretical framework may explain this lack of consensus. Therefore, we aimed to (1) find a comprehensive theoretical framework defining the essential concepts, and (2) test its applicability. An initial review of the medical educational environment literature indicated that such frameworks are lacking. Therefore, we chose an alternative approach to lead us to relevant frameworks from outside the medical educational field; that is, we applied a snowballing technique to find educational environment instruments used to build the contents of the medical ones and investigated their theoretical underpinnings (Study 1). We found two frameworks, one of which was described as incomplete and one of which defines three domains as the key elements of human environments (personal development/goal direction, relationships, and system maintenance and system change) and has been validated in different contexts. To test its applicability, we investigated whether the items of nine medical educational environment instruments could be mapped unto the framework (Study 2). Of 374 items, 94% could: 256 (68%) pertained to a single domain, 94 (25%) to more than one domain. In our context, these domains were found to concern goal orientation, relationships and organization/regulation. We conclude that this framework is applicable and comprehensive, and recommend using it as theoretical underpinning for medical educational environment measures.
KW - Educational environment
KW - Instrument development
KW - Learning environment
KW - Medical education
KW - Theoretical framework
KW - CLINICAL LEARNING-ENVIRONMENT
KW - MEDICAL-EDUCATION
KW - OPERATING-THEATER
KW - CLASSROOM CLIMATE
KW - INSTRUMENT
KW - VALIDATION
KW - CURRICULUM
KW - QUALITY
KW - PERSPECTIVE
KW - OUTCOMES
U2 - 10.1007/s10459-011-9346-8
DO - 10.1007/s10459-011-9346-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 22307806
VL - 17
SP - 727
EP - 742
JO - Advances in Health Sciences Education Theory and Practice
JF - Advances in Health Sciences Education Theory and Practice
SN - 1573-1677
IS - 5
ER -