Cultural Anthropology Faculty Database
Cultural Anthropology
Arts & Sciences
Duke University

 HOME > Arts & Sciences > CA > Faculty    Search Help Login pdf version printable version 

Publications [#344937] of Kearsley A Stewart

Papers Published

  1. Lawrence, C; Mhlaba, T; Stewart, KA; Moletsane, R; Gaede, B; Moshabela, M. "The Hidden Curricula of Medical Education: A Scoping Review.." Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges  vol. 93 no. 4 (April, 2018.): 648-656. [doi]

    Abstract:

    Purpose

    To analyze the plural definitions and applications of the term "hidden curriculum" within the medical education literature and to propose a conceptual framework for conducting future research on the topic.

    Method

    The authors conducted a literature search of nine online databases, seeking articles published on the hidden, informal, or implicit curriculum in medical education prior to March 2017. Two reviewers independently screened articles with set inclusion criteria and performed kappa coefficient tests to evaluate interreviewer reliability. They extracted, coded, and analyzed key data, using grounded theory methodology.

    Results

    The authors uncovered 3,747 articles relating to the hidden curriculum in medical education. Of these, they selected 197 articles for full review. Use of the term "hidden curriculum" has expanded substantially since 2012. U.S. and Canadian medical schools are the focus of two-thirds of the empirical hidden curriculum studies; data from African and South American schools are nearly absent. Few quantitative techniques to measure the hidden curriculum exist. The "hidden curriculum" is understood as a mostly negative concept. Its definition varies widely, but can be understood via four conceptual boundaries: (1) institutional-organizational, (2) interpersonal-social, (3) contextual-cultural, and/or (4) motivational-psychological.

    Conclusions

    Future medical education researchers should make clear the conceptual boundary or boundaries they are applying to the term "hidden curriculum," move away from general musings on its effects, and focus on specific methods for improving the powerful hidden curriculum.

Duke University * Arts & Sciences * CA * Faculty * Staff * Grad student * Alumni * Reload * Login