Megan Brown Profile picture
Nov 17, 2022 25 tweets 8 min read Read on X
You use it, I use it, but how much do you really know about socialisation (or socialization for my friends across the Atlantic)?

Buckle up, it’s #MedEd #TheoryThursdays time!

🧵 Yellow background, black text reading "grab a coffee..
Some of you might be surprised I’m covering socialisation. Many don’t discuss socialisation as a theory or pay it the attention theory needs in MedEd

But it is a theory – in fact, socialisation is a **set of theories** that can help us explain how the status quo is reproduced
Socialisation theories are usually mid-range, as they explore connections between the status quo (+the values/ideas which constitute this), and the social processes (often interactions, shaped by variables such as gender/class/ethnicity) that bring people in line with these ideas
In Med Ed, we usually discuss socialisation when we talk about professional identity (though this isn’t the only way of talking about socialisation and some work also focuses on learning, and on professional behaviour).

Socialisation is commonly defined within med ed as: Infographic – title “how is socialisation defined in med
Many of you will be familiar with Cruess et al.’s model of socialisation and perhaps specifically this diagram, listing the factors they say contribute to socialisation and the process of becoming a dr

(It’s been cited over 650 times!) Spider diagram. There is a central bubble reading “sociali
Perhaps unsurprisingly given its name, socialisation comes from the field of Sociology

But – get this – it’s fallen out of favour in Sociology!

This sort of blew my mind, as it’s such a popular theory in MedEd. I did some detective work to try and find out why
There are different theories of socialisation that influence what socialisation can tell us.

There are two common ways of discussing socialisation:

1.Functionalist socialisation

2.Post-functionalist socialisation
The most popular is functionalist socialisation – and this is usually how socialisation is discussed in Med Ed.

It has important limitations which have led to the demise of the theory's use within Sociology.
Functionalist socialisation...what the heck is functionalism?

Functionalists see society as a structure with interrelated parts. Individuals are integrated into society through socialisation. This allows society to function as there's agreement with the status quo Infographic with a black and white anatomical drawing of a h
This is usually how Med Ed discusses socialisation.

Medical students have to internalise medical values + norms to integrate into the profession, which (it’s supposed) allows the profession to function successfully.

This often reproduces the status quo of the profession.
BUT there are important critiques of functionalist socialisation:
1. Implies participants are passive – culture is downloaded society --> individuals
2. Values and norms are fixed when they can change
3. No attention to conflict between influences
4. Heterogeneity unacknowledged
Critically, functionalist socialisation doesn’t recognise or consider the impact of power – how reproducing the status quo can be a tool for oppression of some groups and identities INFOGRAPHIC – black background, white text with a yellow o
Enter… post-functionalist socialisation (post = after, so “after socialisation which focusses on functionalism”).

This is a theory of socialisation introduced in response to these critiques within Sociology.

It’s rare that we consider socialisation this way in Med Ed.
Guhin et al. have led the exploration of a post-functionalist approach.

They recommend the following:

(Further info, see: Guhin, J., Calarco, J.M. and Miller-Idriss, C., 2021. Whatever happened to socialization?. Annual Review of Sociology, 47, pp.109-129.) INFOGRAPHIC – white post it note, on a yellow background.
This is a big change in how we discuss and use socialisation theory within Med Ed

Socialisation is not a-theoretical. It is a group of theories, each conceptualised differently.

We need to be mindful of this, and clear which perspective we’re studying socialisation from + why INFOGRAPHIC . Construction worker outline holding sign which
The “Boring bits” for both functionalist and post-functionalist socialisation: Infographic with two columns. Text:  Functionalist socialisa
What’s the evidence for socialisation?

Socialisation is widely researched within Med Ed – usually from a functionalist perspective, but increasingly research focusses on power and how power influences identity as a healthcare professional
Though “post-functionalist socialisation” isn’t always mentioned, research illustrates the value of exploring socialisation as heterogenous + involving power

E.g., Wyatt et al. explored how Black trainees navigate identity within a context that stereotypes them + discriminates Screenshot of title, author details, and journal details of
The authors document how Black trainees moderate their presentation to gain acceptance within a profession with a racist history. Tensions in identity are discussed, including institutional silence on violence against Black people contributing to racial identity invisibility
Though this study doesn’t explicitly use a socialisation theory (it is a grounded theory study), the way in which power, conflict, agency, and oppression are focussed on/discussed provide one example of an area ripe for further exploration using post-functionalist socialisation
Using established theory, now we have evidence of this mechanism through a grounded theory approach is important – we can use post-functionalist socialisation as a transferable way of further challenging mechanisms that maintain the status quo + oppression across contexts
It might seem pedantic to ask researchers to label their approach to socialisation as “functionalist” or “post-functionalist”

Why does all this matter again?
We have outlined important critiques of functionalist socialisation

As those within MedEd recognise the inequalities baked into our systems, we need approaches to exploring experiences within racist + inequitable systems. Such research is a foundation for challenging status quo INFOGRAPHIC – megaphone with a speech bubble, on a yellow
We have an ethical duty to recognise + challenge oppression. Using theory which allows us to explore the experiences of healthcare professionals through a critical lens with an explicit focus on power is the 1st step in acting to change oppressive social systems within medicine
So that’s socialisation… I’m not sure about you, but I knew less about socialisation than I thought I did!!

Next week – one for all the educators in the house: Cognitive Load Theory

C U L8R SK8R 🛹✌️

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More from @Megan_EL_Brown

Nov 24, 2022
Hello #MedEd #TheoryThursdays!

Have you ever felt frustrated that you weren’t taking in information quick enough? That you brain was maxed out?

Me too! (Isn’t this experience basically medical school??)

Well, then I have a theory for you…

COGNITIVE LOAD THEORY Yellow background, black te...
Cognitive load is the total information-processing demands required by a task/set of tasks. It’s about cognitive capacity – how much information learners can handle before becoming maxed out. Cognitive load theory implied that we have a limited capacity to process new info.
Cognitive load theory is based on how the proponents of this theory say the brain works. The brain has complex memory systems – sensory, working, and long-term memory.

Working memory can only process limited info at any one time.
Read 24 tweets
Nov 3, 2022
It’s that time of the week again! #TheoryThursdays

The first #MedEd theory we’re going to cover is (drum roll pls) …

THE HIDDEN CURRICULUM

Many of us will know the term, but do we really know what it’s all about?

A thread 🧵 Yellow background, black te...
What is the hidden curriculum?

We don’t have a simple definition

Some argue that the hidden curriculum (HC) is the unwanted aspects of becoming a dr. Others argue it can be positive + we can exploit it for teaching.

IMO it’s more complex than either of these two extremes
The hidden curriculum (HC) is a concept (micro-level theory) that can be used as an entry point for thinking about + studying the space between formal and other-than-formal learning. Infographic. On the left is...
Read 24 tweets
Oct 27, 2022
I am slightly overwhelmed by all of the lovely comments on last week’s #MedEd #TheoryThursday thread. Thank you all for nerding out with me!!

Right, now on to PARADIGMS

What are paradigms, why are they important + what’s their relationship with theory?

🧵 Yellow background, black te...
Paradigms are assumptions, values, beliefs + practices that form distinct ways of viewing the world. They are usually shared by people in a community. They inform how we view + discuss reality and knowledge.. + this shapes how we try and find out about experiences/our environment Title: "What are parad...
Theories are not paradigms, and paradigms are not theories.

Theories help us explain the connections between what we observe.

Paradigms tell us how we might go about observing those connections in the first place.
Read 24 tweets
Oct 20, 2022
Ok, #MedEd theory nerds – you asked for #TheoryThursday, so here we are.

Before we launch into the weird + wonderful world of various theories, we need to think about what theory is + what it can do.

A thread 🧵 Yellow background, black text reading "grab a coffee..
What the heck is theory?

Well, theory is so confusing because people don’t really agree on what it is! My fave definition is from @LaraVarpio + colleagues Title: "What is theory?" on a yellow and black box
Theories explain the relationships between concepts. Prepositions are statements that might be ✅or ❌ (they are statements made as “facts” that can be true, or may be disproven as false).

So theories have to make statements of “fact “about how concepts connect.
Read 25 tweets

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