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Reinvigorating an Academy of Medical Educators Using Ecological Systems Theory

Eric Zwemer, Fei Chen, Gary L. Beck Dallaghan, Christina Shenvi, Lindsay A. Wilson, Morgran Resnick-Kahle, Jason Crowner, Benny L. Joyner, Lauren M. Westervelt, Joanne M. Jordan, Alice Chuang, Amy W. Shaheen, Susan M. Martinelli

2022Cureus13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The educational framework of communities of practice postulates that early learners join medical communities as social networks that provide a common identity, role modeling and mentorship, and experiential learning. While being elected into a medical society is an honor, member engagement in these groups can falter if the society membership is seen as an honorific rather than one requiring continuing participation. As an example, Academies of Medical Educators have been established by many academic medical centers to encourage collaboration, skill development, professional identity formation, and scholarship. The University of North Carolina established the Academy of Educators in 2006 to create a diverse community of educators to promote the scholarship, teaching skills, and professional identity of educators. Despite rapid growth to over 500 members, we had less than 30 participants at events over the 2017-2018 academic year. To increase member engagement and participation, our academy leadership team used Bronfenbrenner's Ecological Systems Theory to design interventions at each layer of environmental influence, specifically at the microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, macrosystem, and chronosystem levels. In this paper, we describe the multipronged approach used to increase the University of North Carolina Academy of Medical Educators event attendance from 30 to 1,000 faculty participants over the course of one academic year (2018-2019). This paper provides a model as to how medical societies can use ecological systems theory as a natural and comprehensive approach to plan and improve their member engagement and experience.

Topics & Concepts

ScholarshipAttendanceMentorshipIdentity (music)Medical educationCommunity engagementMedicineFaculty developmentEcological systems theorySociologyProfessional developmentPublic relationsEcologyPolitical scienceLawAcousticsPhysicsBiologyHealth and Medical Research ImpactsInterdisciplinary Research and CollaborationBiomedical and Engineering Education