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Learning and career specialty preferences of medical school applicants
Authors:Terry D. Stratton  Donald B. Witzke  Todd R. Cheever
Affiliation:a Department of Behavioral Science, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Office of Medical Education, 800 Rose Street, MN104 UKMC, Lexington, KY 40536-0298, USA
b Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, USA
c Department of Psychiatry, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, KY 40536-0298, USA
Abstract:The present research examined relationships among medical school applicants’ preferred approaches to learning, methods of instruction, and specialty areas (n = 912). Based on confidential responses to a progressive series of paired comparisons, applicants’ preferences for lecture (L), self-study (SS), group discussion (GD), and computers (C) were assessed across three dimensions: (1) comfort; (2) effectiveness; and (3) interest. Using cluster analysis to generate four instructional “profiles,” participants’ comparative preferences for self-study/lecture versus group discussion/computers (+SS, L/−GD, C) were positively associated with interests in surgery and neurology, whereas opposing preferences (+GD, C/−L, SS) corresponded with the practice of family medicine. Using a matriculant subset (N = 160), analyses indicated that these relationships remained after controlling for sex and psychological type.
Keywords:Medical specialty   Learning style   Instructional method   Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
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