Becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program

Background: In each discipline, there are moments where students “get stuck” in their education and/or training and are often unable to move forward. These moments may be caused by threshold concepts as they represent a portal that students must cross in order to become successful in their chosen pr...

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Autores principales: Jacqueline Green, Kari Rasmussen
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Canadian Medical Education Journal 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a6b3465cf5bd4573ab6c6068c7d2118a
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:a6b3465cf5bd4573ab6c6068c7d2118a2021-12-01T22:44:09ZBecoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program10.36834/cmej.433511923-1202https://doaj.org/article/a6b3465cf5bd4573ab6c6068c7d2118a2018-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/43351https://doaj.org/toc/1923-1202Background: In each discipline, there are moments where students “get stuck” in their education and/or training and are often unable to move forward. These moments may be caused by threshold concepts as they represent a portal that students must cross in order to become successful in their chosen profession. This study investigated the threshold concepts from the instructors’ perspective that students must navigate as they transform from learners to dentists within a dental program.                Methods: Two focus groups with faculty members within the School of Dentistry, University of Alberta were completed in the fall of 2017. Focus groups explored the faculty’s perception of the students’ transition from learner to dentist, difficult moments in the program, and the students’ ability to navigate the program successfully. Results: A qualitative phenomenographic analysis of the faculty focus group transcripts identified four potential threshold concepts within the dental program: 1) dealing with the whole patient, 2) accountability, 3) that you may not know everything, and 4) problem solving and adapting during practice. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that there are concepts within a dental program that faculty believe students must navigate in order to transition from learner to dentist. These concepts may inform curriculum design as well as other disciplines in the health sciences. Jacqueline GreenKari RasmussenCanadian Medical Education JournalarticleThreshold ConceptsDental EducationCurriculum DevelopmentProfessionalismPhenomenographyEducation (General)L7-991Medicine (General)R5-920ENCanadian Medical Education Journal, Vol 9, Iss 4 (2018)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Threshold Concepts
Dental Education
Curriculum Development
Professionalism
Phenomenography
Education (General)
L7-991
Medicine (General)
R5-920
spellingShingle Threshold Concepts
Dental Education
Curriculum Development
Professionalism
Phenomenography
Education (General)
L7-991
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Jacqueline Green
Kari Rasmussen
Becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program
description Background: In each discipline, there are moments where students “get stuck” in their education and/or training and are often unable to move forward. These moments may be caused by threshold concepts as they represent a portal that students must cross in order to become successful in their chosen profession. This study investigated the threshold concepts from the instructors’ perspective that students must navigate as they transform from learners to dentists within a dental program.                Methods: Two focus groups with faculty members within the School of Dentistry, University of Alberta were completed in the fall of 2017. Focus groups explored the faculty’s perception of the students’ transition from learner to dentist, difficult moments in the program, and the students’ ability to navigate the program successfully. Results: A qualitative phenomenographic analysis of the faculty focus group transcripts identified four potential threshold concepts within the dental program: 1) dealing with the whole patient, 2) accountability, 3) that you may not know everything, and 4) problem solving and adapting during practice. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that there are concepts within a dental program that faculty believe students must navigate in order to transition from learner to dentist. These concepts may inform curriculum design as well as other disciplines in the health sciences.
format article
author Jacqueline Green
Kari Rasmussen
author_facet Jacqueline Green
Kari Rasmussen
author_sort Jacqueline Green
title Becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program
title_short Becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program
title_full Becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program
title_fullStr Becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program
title_full_unstemmed Becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a Canadian dental program
title_sort becoming a dentist: faculty perceptions of student experiences with threshold concepts in a canadian dental program
publisher Canadian Medical Education Journal
publishDate 2018
url https://doaj.org/article/a6b3465cf5bd4573ab6c6068c7d2118a
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AT karirasmussen becomingadentistfacultyperceptionsofstudentexperienceswiththresholdconceptsinacanadiandentalprogram
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