Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education

<p> An extensive literature review identified emotional intelligence and metacognition had not been examined in medical education as integrated concepts in the reflective practice of medical residents. Continued research into the independent application of these concepts in medical education m...

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Main Author: Weigand, Robert
Language:EN
Published: University of New England 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10798589
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-107985892018-03-15T15:59:24Z Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education Weigand, Robert Educational evaluation|Educational leadership|Medicine <p> An extensive literature review identified emotional intelligence and metacognition had not been examined in medical education as integrated concepts in the reflective practice of medical residents. Continued research into the independent application of these concepts in medical education maintains a perspective that has permeated medical literature for 20 years. Research into emotional intelligence and metacognitive functioning and its&rsquo; influence on reflective practice in medical education acknowledges the need for more taxonomies of knowledge and skills. A quantitative correlational study was conducted utilizing Family Practice residents. Three valid and reliable assessment tools identified as the MSCEIT, MAI and Groningen were used in this study to determine emotional intelligence, metacognitive ability and reflective ability in Family Practice residents. Findings did not refute the null hypothesis identified as no statistical relationship exists between emotional intelligence and metacognition. Scores between males and females in emotional intelligence appeared descriptively different but not statistically significant. Emotional intelligence and metacognition did not predict strength in reflective ability based on residency year. Descriptive findings indicated female residents scored higher in perceiving emotions while male residents scored higher in thinking about their feelings. Female Family Practice residents scored higher than male Family Practice residents in metacognition each residency year. Females also scored higher than males in reflective practice in each of the three residency years. The small sample size in this study was an acknowledged limitation. Additional qualitative and quantitative research needs to be conducted to learn more about the integration of these three concepts in medical education. iv</p><p> University of New England 2018-03-13 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10798589 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational evaluation|Educational leadership|Medicine
spellingShingle Educational evaluation|Educational leadership|Medicine
Weigand, Robert
Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education
description <p> An extensive literature review identified emotional intelligence and metacognition had not been examined in medical education as integrated concepts in the reflective practice of medical residents. Continued research into the independent application of these concepts in medical education maintains a perspective that has permeated medical literature for 20 years. Research into emotional intelligence and metacognitive functioning and its&rsquo; influence on reflective practice in medical education acknowledges the need for more taxonomies of knowledge and skills. A quantitative correlational study was conducted utilizing Family Practice residents. Three valid and reliable assessment tools identified as the MSCEIT, MAI and Groningen were used in this study to determine emotional intelligence, metacognitive ability and reflective ability in Family Practice residents. Findings did not refute the null hypothesis identified as no statistical relationship exists between emotional intelligence and metacognition. Scores between males and females in emotional intelligence appeared descriptively different but not statistically significant. Emotional intelligence and metacognition did not predict strength in reflective ability based on residency year. Descriptive findings indicated female residents scored higher in perceiving emotions while male residents scored higher in thinking about their feelings. Female Family Practice residents scored higher than male Family Practice residents in metacognition each residency year. Females also scored higher than males in reflective practice in each of the three residency years. The small sample size in this study was an acknowledged limitation. Additional qualitative and quantitative research needs to be conducted to learn more about the integration of these three concepts in medical education. iv</p><p>
author Weigand, Robert
author_facet Weigand, Robert
author_sort Weigand, Robert
title Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education
title_short Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education
title_full Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education
title_fullStr Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education
title_full_unstemmed Identifying Emotional Intelligence and Metacognition in Medical Education
title_sort identifying emotional intelligence and metacognition in medical education
publisher University of New England
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10798589
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