Article, 2024

“Teaching capital”– a sociological analysis of medical educator portfolios for promotion

Advances in Health Sciences Education, ISSN 1382-4996, 1573-1677, Pages 1-18, 10.1007/s10459-024-10333-3

Contributors

Christensen, Mette Krogh 0000-0002-7097-9993 (Corresponding author) [1] Pedersen, Iris Maria [1] Wichmann-Hansen, Gitte 0000-0001-9797-2831 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aarhus University
  2. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Medical educator portfolios (MEP) are increasingly recognized as a tool for developing and documenting teaching performance in Health Professions Education. However, there is a need to better understand the complex interplay between institutional guidelines and how teachers decode those guidelines and assign value to teaching merits. To gain a deeper understanding of this dynamic, this study employed a sociological analysis to understand how medical educators aspiring to professorships use MEPs to display their teaching merits and how cultural capital is reflected in these artefacts. We collected 36 medical educator portfolios for promotion from a large research-intensive university and conducted a deductive content analysis using institutional guidelines that distinguished between mandatory (accounting for the total body of teaching conducted) and optional content (arguing for pedagogical choices and evidencing the quality, respectively). Our analysis showed that the portfolios primarily included quantifiable data about teaching activities, e.g., numbers of students, topics and classes taught. Notably, they often lacked evidence of quality and scholarship of teaching. Looking at these findings through a Bourdieusian lens revealed that teachers in this social field exchange objectified evidence of hours spent on teaching into teaching capital recognized by their institution. Our findings highlight how institutional guidelines for MEPs construct a pedagogical battlefield, where educators try to decode and exchange the “right” and recognized teaching capital. This indicates that MEPs reflect the norms and practices of the academic field more than individual teaching quality.

Keywords

Bourdieusian lens, University, academic field, activity, analysis, artifacts, battlefield, capital, capital-, class, complex interplay, construction, content, content analysis, cultural capital, data, deductive content analysis, education, educational portfolio, evidence, evidence of quality, exchange, field, field exchange, findings, guidelines, health, health professions education, hours, institutional guidelines, institutions, interplay, lens, medical education, merits, norms, optional content, performance, portfolio, practice, professions education, promoter, quality, research-intensive university, scholarship, scholarship of teaching, sociological analysis, students, study, teachers, teaching, teaching activities, teaching performance, teaching quality, tools, topics

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