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A Qualitative Study of Senior Residents' Learning Strategies to Prepare for Unsupervised Practice
by
Griffith, Max
, Watsjold, Bjorn K
, Garrett, Alexander
, Davis, Mallory
, Ilgen, Jonathan S
, Jauregui, Joshua
in
Interviews
2025
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A Qualitative Study of Senior Residents' Learning Strategies to Prepare for Unsupervised Practice
by
Griffith, Max
, Watsjold, Bjorn K
, Garrett, Alexander
, Davis, Mallory
, Ilgen, Jonathan S
, Jauregui, Joshua
in
Interviews
2025
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A Qualitative Study of Senior Residents' Learning Strategies to Prepare for Unsupervised Practice
Journal Article
A Qualitative Study of Senior Residents' Learning Strategies to Prepare for Unsupervised Practice
2025
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Overview
Introduction: As emergency medicine (EM) residents prepare for the transition into unsupervised practice, their focus shifts from demonstrating competencies within familiar training environments to anticipating their new roles and responsibilities as attending physicians, often in unfamiliar settings. Using the self-regulated learning framework, we explored how senior EM residents proactively identify goals and enact learning strategies leading up to the transition from residency into unsupervised practice. Methods: In this study we used a constructivist grounded theory approach, interviewing EM residents in their final year of training at two residency programs. Using the self-regulated learning framework as a sensitizing concept for analysis, we conducted inductive, line-by-line coding of interview transcripts and grouped codes into categories. Theoretical sufficiency was reached after 12 interviews, with four subsequent interviews producing no divergent or disconfirming examples. Results: We interviewed16 senior residents about their self-regulated learning approaches to preparing for unsupervised practice. Participants identified two types of gaps that they sought to address prior to entering practice: knowledge/skill gaps, and autonomy gaps. We employed specific workplace learning strategies to address each type of gap, which we have termed cherry-picking, case-based hypotheticals, parachuting, and making the call, and reflection on both internal and external sources of feedback to assess the effectiveness of these learning strategies. This study presents participants’ identification of gaps in their residency training, their learning strategies, and reflections as cyclical processes of self-regulated learning. Conclusion: In their final months of training EM residents strategically leverage learning strategies to bridge gaps between their self-assessed capabilities and those they anticipate needing to succeed in unsupervised practice. These findings show that trainees have agency in how they use goal setting, strategic actions, and ongoing reflection to prepare themselves for unsupervised practice. Our findings also suggest tailored approaches whereby programs can support learning experiences that foster senior residents’ agency when preparing for the challenges of future practice.
Publisher
University of California Digital Library - eScholarship
Subject
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