TY - JOUR
T1 - Communities of clinical practice and normalising technologies of self
T2 - Learning to fit in on the surgical ward
AU - Jaye, Chrystal
AU - Egan, Tony
AU - Smith-Han, Kelby
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by a University of Otago CALT Research into Teaching Grant. Ethical approval was granted by the University of Otago Ethics Committee (ref. 03/10/114). The authors are grateful to the Department of Surgery at the Dunedin School of Medicine for opening up the teaching ward rounds and clinical tutorials to the critical gaze of the authors in this exploration of the clinical learning environment, and for their engagement with the perspectives that arose out of it.
PY - 2010/4
Y1 - 2010/4
N2 - This paper reports observational research of Fourth Year medical students in their first year of clinical training doing their surgical attachment. Previously, the authors have argued that medical curricula constitute normalising technologies of self that aim to create a certain kind of doctor. Here, they argue that a key mechanism through which these normalising technologies are exercised in the workplace is Etienne Wenger's communities of practice. In the clinical environment the authors identify communities of clinical practice (CoCP) as groups of health professionals that come together with the specific and common purpose of patient care. Fourth Year medical students join these transient communities as participants who are both peripheral and legitimate. Communities of clinical practice are potent vehicles for student learning. They learn and internalise the normative professional values and behaviours that they witness and experience within the disciplinary block of the medical school and teaching hospital; specifically, the authors suggest, it is through their participation in communities of clinical practice that medical students learn how to 'be one of us'.
AB - This paper reports observational research of Fourth Year medical students in their first year of clinical training doing their surgical attachment. Previously, the authors have argued that medical curricula constitute normalising technologies of self that aim to create a certain kind of doctor. Here, they argue that a key mechanism through which these normalising technologies are exercised in the workplace is Etienne Wenger's communities of practice. In the clinical environment the authors identify communities of clinical practice (CoCP) as groups of health professionals that come together with the specific and common purpose of patient care. Fourth Year medical students join these transient communities as participants who are both peripheral and legitimate. Communities of clinical practice are potent vehicles for student learning. They learn and internalise the normative professional values and behaviours that they witness and experience within the disciplinary block of the medical school and teaching hospital; specifically, the authors suggest, it is through their participation in communities of clinical practice that medical students learn how to 'be one of us'.
KW - Medical anthropology
KW - Qualitative biomedicine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77951698971&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13648470903569388
DO - 10.1080/13648470903569388
M3 - Article
C2 - 20419517
AN - SCOPUS:77951698971
SN - 1364-8470
VL - 17
SP - 59
EP - 73
JO - Anthropology and Medicine
JF - Anthropology and Medicine
IS - 1
ER -