Abstract

Medical education is a messy tangle of social and material elements. These material entities include tools, like curriculum guides, stethoscopes, cell phones, accreditation standards, and mannequins; natural elements, like weather systems, disease vectors, and human bodies; and, objects, like checklists, internet connections, classrooms, lights, chairs and an endless array of others.We propose that sociomaterial approaches to ethnography can help us explore taken for granted, or under-theorized, elements of a situation under study, thereby enabling us to think differently. In this article, we describe ideas informing Actor-Network Theory approaches, and how these ideas translate into how ethnographic research is designed and conducted. We investigate epistemological (what we can know, and how) positioning of the researcher in an actor-network theory informed ethnography, and describe how we tailor ethnographic methods—document and artefact analysis; observation; and interviews—to align with a sociomaterial worldview.Untangling sociomaterial scenarios can offer a novel perspective on myriad contemporary medical education issues. These issues include examining how novel tools (e.g. accreditation standards, assessment tools, mannequins, videoconferencing technologies) and spaces (e.g. simulation suites, videoconferenced lecture theatres) used in medical education impact how teaching and learning actually happen in these settings.

Highlights

  • Rather than considering a medical education issue as a matter of individual human skill or cognition, we focus on untangling a heterogeneous web of human and non-human, material and immaterial, factors bringing about the issue

  • Methods, we describe here are characteristic of actornetwork theory informed ethnography, they are not, prescriptive

  • There is much to be learned by attuning to what has been largely obscured in medical education research: materiality

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Summary

Introduction

Our work occurs in multiple, ever-changing contexts, and involves diverse people, tools, and resources. Sociomaterial approaches offer new perspectives on the rich messiness of everyday medical education, prompting questions like: how do chosen assessment tools influence OSCE assessment practices [1]? ; how do videoconferencing technologies work to shape distributed medical education [2, 3]? ; how do clinical spaces influence role negotiation amongst interprofessional teams [4,5,6,7,8]? ; and, how do health technologies impact nursing practice in clinical contexts [11]?. How the leopard changed its spots: the evolution of complexity.

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