TY - JOUR
T1 - Examining Healthcare Institutions by Bringing Qualitative Data from Two Eras into Empirical Dialogue
AU - Everitt, Judson G
AU - Johnson, James M
AU - Burr, William H
AU - Shanower, Stephanie H
PY - 2020/3/26
Y1 - 2020/3/26
N2 - In this paper, we argue that there is new insight to be gained by reexamining the classic text, Boys in White , in strategic ways. Specifically, we share excerpts from Boys in White with current medical students and ask for their reactions in qualitative interviews, examining the relevance (or lack thereof) of earlier meanings about professional training for current processes of professional training. We show how we have employed this technique in our current project revisiting Boys in White with current medical students, and discuss preliminary findings that reveal the potential of this technique for documenting evidence of macro-level forces in healthcare institutions using qualitative data on new doctors. We conclude with discussion of alternative approaches through which scholars could make use of this technique in future professional socialization scholarship that could shed light on dynamics of institutional persistence and change.
AB - In this paper, we argue that there is new insight to be gained by reexamining the classic text, Boys in White , in strategic ways. Specifically, we share excerpts from Boys in White with current medical students and ask for their reactions in qualitative interviews, examining the relevance (or lack thereof) of earlier meanings about professional training for current processes of professional training. We show how we have employed this technique in our current project revisiting Boys in White with current medical students, and discuss preliminary findings that reveal the potential of this technique for documenting evidence of macro-level forces in healthcare institutions using qualitative data on new doctors. We conclude with discussion of alternative approaches through which scholars could make use of this technique in future professional socialization scholarship that could shed light on dynamics of institutional persistence and change.
KW - professional socialization
KW - inhabited institutions
KW - medical education
KW - healthcare
UR - https://ecommons.luc.edu/soc_facpubs/33
U2 - 10.1177/1466138120913062
DO - 10.1177/1466138120913062
M3 - Article
JO - Sociology: Faculty Publications and Other Works
JF - Sociology: Faculty Publications and Other Works
ER -