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Penny Newman a Wendover Health Centre,
Wendover, Bucks HP22 6LD, b Department of Primary Health Care,
University of Oxford, Oxford OX3 7LF Correspondence
to: P Newman pennynewm{at}aol.com
"I seek a method by which teachers teach less and
learners learn more."
Johann Comenicus, writer of the first
illustrated textbook (1630)
Attitudes towards and expectations of careers have changed. Portfolio careers and changing needs in the medical workforce have led, for example, to increasing numbers of postgraduate entrants to medical school, greater movement between specialties, and an influx of qualified doctors from overseas.1-3 Learners with substantial previous experience and knowledge may provide a challenge to trainers to maximise their learning.
Recognising the individuality of the learner is the hallmark of good teaching.4 We explore particular attributes of experienced adult learners and for each attribute propose an educational model that may help the trainer develop an approach to achieve maximum growth. Raised awareness of an individual's learning needs and potential contribution, combined with greater use of these models, will promote a movement away from didactic teaching, which is characterised by an unequal status of teacher and learner, to one of coaching and partnership between learner and trainer, with additional benefit to both.5
To illustrate our points we have used examples taken from the
real lives of postgraduate learners in medicine
people who have a
substantial amount of previous experience and have changed the
direction of their career. The examples illustrate some of the
attributes we describe and the relevance of the educational model. As
all learners have relevant previous experience and prior understandings
that may pass unrecognised, the attributes and related frameworks we
describe are, in practice, relevant to all adult
learners.6
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Summary points
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The learner brings maturity |
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Changing career paths and encouragement of lifelong learning have resulted in a wider age range for learners in medicine. 2 7 8 Adult learners often bring maturity, which may become evident in greater confidence, self awareness, and problem solving skills.
Education needs to be "learner centred," and educational models need to be relevant to adult learning. This requires a fundamental change in the role of the educator from that of a didactic teacher to that of a facilitator of learning.9 Box 1 illustrates an approach that is applicable to the education of adults.
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The learner brings substantial professional and life experience |
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As well as maturity, experienced learners can bring specialist skills that are transferable between specialties, core skills common to all specialties, and an "outside perspective" drawn from other cultures which is useful to the development of empathy.11
The transferable learning experience of health professionals includes:
Our stories of two postgraduate entrants to medical school illustrate the substantial amount of relevant experience they both acquired beforehand and differences in the way this was valued in their subsequent medical education (box 2).
Experience is at the heart of adult learning, both in the sense of a property of the individual ("he has bags of experience") and in the sense of the process of enactment by which one learns ("you won't understand what I mean until you experience it for yourself").12
The central importance of learning through experience is illustrated in figure 1. The learning cycle has three phases. It starts with the experience of the learner and leads to the specific learning that occurs on the basis of that experience and the reflective activities, guided by the tutor, that are needed to extract specific learning from the overall experience.13
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The learner is self directed |
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Experienced adult learners are likely to have a self directed learning style. The development of independent learners is well grounded theoretically.14 The style of the trainer needs to be matched to that of the learner to ensure confidence and enthusiasm for learning.
Gerald Grow has proposed a model that allows teachers to develop and adapt their style to match that of the learner.15 The model illustrates how the expert, authoritative style is severely mismatched with that of the self directed learner (fig 2).
The model should be seen as dynamic rather than static. Neither learner nor teacher should be trapped at any stage: as the learner moves the teacher must likewise change gear. Valuing learners' expertise as it accumulates and supporting them taking responsibility for identifying their own educational needs add to a process of empowerment that is recognised as important for promoting lifelong learning. 5 9
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The learner makes a positive contribution |
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Learners can often make an active and positive contribution to their organisations, as illustrated by both Laura and Sara, and learners may be an untapped resource (box 3). If encouraged, learners can enrich the "educator's" experience, as well as providing additional skills that, for example, may help develop the trainer's own practice.
A career portfolio does not always follow the path of upward progression.16 Learners may move from a position of seniority and competence to one of greater dependency and increased vulnerability as new skills are learnt. Laura and Sara illustrate a contrasting reaction from trainers in moving between general practice and public health. For the teacher to be learner centred, it is crucial to engender in the learner a feeling of being valued.5
Didactic teaching is, by definition, characterised by giving
instruction. It depends on according a status to the teacher that is at
a different level from that of the learner. Almost implicit in the term
is a transaction from parent to child, rather than from adult to
adult.17
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All learners are individuals |
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The examples of real case scenarios show the great variety of
skills, knowledge, and experience that mature learners present. A
critical task is to help the learner in constructing a personal learning plan, a process that entails formative appraisal and rigorous
assessment of educational needs.18 This is the foundation of individual learning, but it may be at odds with the learning of a
peer group.
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Applying a different approach |
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The people in our vignettes illustrate attributes of maturity, experience, independence, untapped resource, and individuality. We believe that these are attributes of all adult learners, and an awareness of these requires a flexible and reflective approach from the educator.
Much is made of "paternalism" in the relationship between doctor and patient.19 Paternalism in the educational relationship between student and trainer is likely to cause adult learners great discomfort. It may affect their learning, motivation, and effectiveness and reduce their overall contribution.20 Trainers may lose out in the learning and satisfaction offered by a two way educational relationship.
Just as input from patients can modify paternalistic consulting behaviours so feedback from learners can help teachers.21 Determinants of a positive partnership between learner and trainer are based on each party valuing the contribution of the other and a flexible interaction from adult to adult that is determined by the needs of the learner and his or her personal learning plan. Reflection by both the learner and the trainer is key.22 It is how the learner learns rather than what the trainer teaches that is important (table).
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Conclusions |
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We recognise that the NHS workforce has many experienced learners, and they will assume greater importance in the context of the NHS Plan.23 If the target for additional doctors is to be achieved it will be essential to encourage doctors to return to practice; these doctors will, by definition, be mature.
Appropriate models of adult education are models that emphasise a facilitative approach, guided reflection, learning from experience, and an adult to adult relationship between learner and trainer. In addition to education focused on groups, the learning needs of individuals need to be catered for and their wider experience acknowledged and used. Paternalism in an adult educational relationship is rarely appropriate.
Any move towards common standards in education must not obscure the
need for medical educators to remain flexible and agile in responding
to different learners' needs. Educators need to improve their skills
in facilitation, judicious application of educational theory, and
mentoring. We believe that moving in this direction makes the
educator's job more rewarding and the learner's more fruitful.
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Acknowledgments |
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We gratefully acknowledge the contribution that
learners and their experiences have made to our thinking
some of these
are described in our vignettes with altered identities. We thank
Philippa Moreton and Richard Stott for their support and encouragement.
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Footnotes |
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Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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