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Fostering uncertainty tolerance in anatomy education: Lessons learned from how humanities, arts and social science (HASS) educators develop learners' uncertainty tolerance

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TLDR
In this article , the authors used a qualitative exploratory study to learn from humanities, arts and social sciences (HASS) educators' established uncertainty tolerance pedagogies to enhance anatomy education.
Abstract
Uncertainty tolerance, individuals' perceptions/responses to uncertain stimuli, is increasingly recognized as critical to effective healthcare practice. While the Covid‐19 pandemic generated collective uncertainty, healthcare‐related uncertainty is omnipresent. Correspondingly, there is increasing focus on uncertainty tolerance as a health professional graduate “competency,” and a concomitant interest in identifying pedagogy fostering learners' uncertainty tolerance. Despite these calls, practical guidelines for educators are lacking. There is some initial evidence that anatomy education can foster medical students' uncertainty tolerance (e.g., anatomical variation and dissection novelty), however, there remains a knowledge gap regarding robust curriculum‐wide uncertainty tolerance teaching strategies. Drawing upon humanities, arts and social sciences (HASS) educators' established uncertainty tolerance pedagogies, this study sought to learn from HASS academics' experiences with, and teaching practices related to, uncertainty pedagogy using a qualitative, exploratory study design. Framework analysis was undertaken using an abductive approach, wherein researchers oscillate between inductive and deductive coding (comparing to the uncertainty tolerance conceptual model). During this analysis, the authors analyzed ~386 min of data from purposively sampled HASS academics' (n = 14) discussions to address the following research questions: (1) What teaching practices do HASS academics' perceive as impacting learners' uncertainty tolerance, and (2) How do HASS academics execute these teaching practices? The results extend current understanding of the moderating effects of education on uncertainty tolerance and supports prior findings that the anatomy learning environment is ripe for supporting learner uncertainty tolerance development. This study adds to growing literature on the powerful moderating effect education has on uncertainty tolerance and proposes translation of HASS uncertainty tolerance teaching practices to enhance anatomy education.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Artificial Intelligence and Clinical Anatomical Education: Promises and Perils.

TL;DR: Practical recommendations for a considered approach to working alongside AI in the contemporary anatomy education learning environment are provided, including enhanced transparency about how AI is integrated, AI developer diversity, inclusion of uncertainty and anatomical variations within deployed AI, and engaging AI to extend human capacities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fostering uncertainty tolerance in anatomy education: Lessons learned from how humanities, arts and social science (HASS) educators develop learners' uncertainty tolerance

TL;DR: In this article , the authors used a qualitative exploratory study to learn from humanities, arts and social sciences (HASS) educators' established uncertainty tolerance pedagogies to enhance anatomy education.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medical Student Experiences of Uncertainty Tolerance Moderators: A Longitudinal Qualitative Study

TL;DR: This study identified multiple moderators of medical students' UT, key among them being reflective learning, which contemporary and future medical educators may be able to harness in order to develop learner UT as a healthcare graduate attribute.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Qualitative data analysis for applied policy research

Jane Ritchie, +1 more
TL;DR: The last two decades have seen a notable growth in the use of qualitative methods for applied social policy research as discussed by the authors, which is underpinned by the persistent requirement in social policy fields to understand complex behaviours, needs, systems and cultures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The qualitative research interview

TL;DR: This work examines less structured interview strategies in which the person interviewed is more a participant in meaning making than a conduit from which information is retrieved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sample Size in Qualitative Interview Studies: Guided by Information Power

TL;DR: It is suggested that the size of a sample with sufficient information power depends on (a) the aim of the study, (b) sample specificity, (c) use of established theory, (d) quality of dialogue, and (e) analysis strategy.
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Trending Questions (1)
To what extent is there a relationship between uncertainty tolerance and teachers?

Der Beitrag untersucht, wie Pädagogen in den Geistes-, Kunst- und Sozialwissenschaften die Unsicherheitstoleranz der Lernenden fördern können, befasst sich jedoch nicht speziell mit der Beziehung zwischen Unsicherheitstoleranz und Lehrern.