TY - JOUR
T1 - Sharpening Our Tools
T2 - Conducting Medical Education Research Using Critical Theory
AU - Chow, Candace J.
AU - Hirshfield, Laura E.
AU - Wyatt, Tasha R.
N1 - Funding Information:
MESRE program of the Southern Group on Educational Affairs. The third author was employed by the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University at the time of data collection.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Issue: As medical education continues to grapple with issues of systemic racism and oppression within its institutions, educational researchers will undoubtedly turn to critical theory to help illuminate these issues. Critical theory refers both to a “school of thought” and a process of critique that reveals the dynamic forces impacting minoritized groups and individuals. Critical theory can be helpful when researchers want to examine or expose social structures for their asymmetrical power differentials, and subsequently act upon them to create change. Evidence: However, despite the repeated calls for more critical work in medical education, merely describing critical theory’s school of thought has not forwarded researchers’ engagement with these theories. Presently, critical analyses remain rare in medical education. One potential reason for the lack of critical analyses is that there is little guidance for how researchers might engage with their data and approach their findings. Implications: In this paper, we go beyond merely describing critical theory and demonstrate how critical theory can be used as an analytic approach to interrogate the experiences of minoritized individuals in medical education. Using three critical theories: critical race theory, feminist theory, and postcolonial theory, we provide an illustration of how researchers might approach their data using one of three critical theories. In doing so, we hope to assist researchers in better understanding the utility of critical analyses to illuminate sociohistorical forces at work within medical education.
AB - Issue: As medical education continues to grapple with issues of systemic racism and oppression within its institutions, educational researchers will undoubtedly turn to critical theory to help illuminate these issues. Critical theory refers both to a “school of thought” and a process of critique that reveals the dynamic forces impacting minoritized groups and individuals. Critical theory can be helpful when researchers want to examine or expose social structures for their asymmetrical power differentials, and subsequently act upon them to create change. Evidence: However, despite the repeated calls for more critical work in medical education, merely describing critical theory’s school of thought has not forwarded researchers’ engagement with these theories. Presently, critical analyses remain rare in medical education. One potential reason for the lack of critical analyses is that there is little guidance for how researchers might engage with their data and approach their findings. Implications: In this paper, we go beyond merely describing critical theory and demonstrate how critical theory can be used as an analytic approach to interrogate the experiences of minoritized individuals in medical education. Using three critical theories: critical race theory, feminist theory, and postcolonial theory, we provide an illustration of how researchers might approach their data using one of three critical theories. In doing so, we hope to assist researchers in better understanding the utility of critical analyses to illuminate sociohistorical forces at work within medical education.
KW - Critical theory
KW - critical race theory
KW - feminist theory
KW - post-colonial theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85110900594&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/10401334.2021.1946401
DO - 10.1080/10401334.2021.1946401
M3 - Article
C2 - 34282701
AN - SCOPUS:85110900594
SN - 1040-1334
VL - 34
SP - 285
EP - 294
JO - Teaching and Learning in Medicine
JF - Teaching and Learning in Medicine
IS - 3
ER -