Can adaptive expertise, reflective practice, and activity theory help achieve systems-based practice and collective competence?

Authors

  • Angela Orsino University of Toronto
  • Stella Ng Centre for Faculty Development, University of Toronto, Ontario, Li Ka Shing International Healthcare Education Centre, St. Michael's Hospital

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36834/cmej.53182

Abstract

Physicians must function as integral members of the complex social systems in which they work to support the health of their patients; competency-based education frameworks describe this function of physicians in terms of systems-based practice, advocacy, and collaboration. Yet education for these social competencies continues to present challenges, perhaps because medical education has tended to focus less on social systems and more on traditional healthcare systems. In this paper, we use a clinical example from the discipline of Developmental Pediatrics, that of early identification of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), as an illustration of a socially complex zone of practice necessitating systems-based practice. We first explore this practice context through the framings of collective competence and activity theory to represent the complex practices and systems involved in identifying ASD. We then align these framings of the practice context and complexity with two bodies of education theory, adaptive expertise and reflective practice. We argue that these approaches to education will prepare learners to be more aware of and responsive to the dynamic needs of the complex and intersecting systems in which they will practice.

Author Biographies

  • Angela Orsino, University of Toronto

    Assistant Professor

    Division of Developmental Pediatrics

    Department of Pediatrics

    University of Toronto

  • Stella Ng, Centre for Faculty Development, University of Toronto, Ontario, Li Ka Shing International Healthcare Education Centre, St. Michael's Hospital

    PhD, Reg. CASLPO

    Director of Research Centre for Faculty Development

    Assistant Professor, Dept. of Speech-Language Pathology

    Education Scientist, Centre for Ambulatory Care Education

    Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto

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Published

2019-07-21

Issue

Section

Reviews, Theoretical Papers, and Meta-Analyses

How to Cite

1.
Can adaptive expertise, reflective practice, and activity theory help achieve systems-based practice and collective competence?. Can. Med. Ed. J [Internet]. 2019 Jul. 21 [cited 2025 Dec. 14];10(3):e55-60. Available from: https://dev.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/53182