Abstract

Visual problem solving is essential to highly visual and knowledge-intensive professional domains such as clinical pathology, which trainees learn by participating in relevant tasks at the workplace (apprenticeship). Proper guidance of the visual problem solving of apprentices by the master is necessary. Interaction and adaptation to the expertise level of the learner are identified as key ingredients of this guidance. This study focuses on the effect of increased participation of the learner in the task on the interaction and adaptation of the guidance by masters. Thirteen unique dyads consisting of a clinical pathologist (master) and a resident (apprentice) discussed and diagnosed six microscope images. Their dialogues were analysed on their content. The dyads were divided in two groups according to the experience of the apprentice. For each dyad, master and apprentice both operated the microscope for half of the cases. Interaction was operationalised as the equal contribution of both master and apprentice to the dialogue. Adaptation was operationalised as the extent to which the content of the dialogues was adapted to the apprentice’s level. The main hypothesis stated that the interaction and adaptation increase when apprentices operate the microscope. Most results confirmed this hypothesis: apprentices contributed more content when participating more and the content of these dialogues better reflected expertise differences of apprentices. Based on these results, it is argued that, for learning visual problem solving in a visual and knowledge-intensive domain, it is not only important to externalise master performance, but also that of the apprentice.

Highlights

  • Visual problem solving is an essential skill in professional domains such as medicine and aviation

  • Masters and apprentices contributed different content to the dialogue, depending on the microscope operation. To break down this effect, separate Chi squares were conducted for microscope operation by masters and apprentices

  • Hypothesis 1 stated that the interaction between master and apprentice increases with increased apprentice participation

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Summary

Introduction

Visual problem solving is an essential skill in professional domains such as medicine and aviation. Experts tend to analyse cases in a comparative manner, in terms of typicality (Jaarsma et al 2014). These strategies and knowledge structures do differ fundamentally with expertise, they are highly covert and become apparent only in interaction with relevant visual stimuli. This raises the question how these complex cognitive and visual skills are learned and taught

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