An Applied Linguistics Study of How Students Prevent Embarrassments and Impositions During Interactive Examination OSCEs

To assess the effectiveness of politeness strategies used by pharmacy students to avoid embarrassing or imposing on others during objective structured clinical examinations. A total of 19 objective structured clinical examinations video recordings of 10 students (participants) interacting with mock...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of pharmaceutical education 2023-08, Vol.87 (8), p.100103-100103, Article 100103
Hauptverfasser: Alsubaie, Sarah, Grant, Daniel, Donyai, Parastou
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container_title American journal of pharmaceutical education
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creator Alsubaie, Sarah
Grant, Daniel
Donyai, Parastou
description To assess the effectiveness of politeness strategies used by pharmacy students to avoid embarrassing or imposing on others during objective structured clinical examinations. A total of 19 objective structured clinical examinations video recordings of 10 students (participants) interacting with mock patients were examined using the framework of Politeness Theory (PT). All relevant participant acts (speech activities) were coded using PT into (1) type of face threatening acts (ie, potentially sensitive situations—as regarded by PT) and (2) politeness strategies used to mitigate them. Conversation Analysis was then used to examine the effectiveness of conversational strategies by judging the ‘patient’ responses to these strategies. Most acts had the potential to impact patients’ negative face needs (ie, desire to act autonomously, eg, upon the practitioner making a request), positive face needs (ie, desire to be liked, eg, upon the practitioner making a diagnosis), or both. Despite applying a variety of positive politeness strategies (eg, avoiding disagreement, or expressing understanding) to prevent embarrassment to the patient, and negative politeness strategies (eg, being indirect, using hedging, or minimizing the imposition) to avoid directly imposing on them, “dispreferred responses” showed participants mostly focused on avoiding impositions, corresponding to what they have been taught, rather embarrassments. Participants were less aware that discussing sensitive topics could cause embarrassment to patients, with the potential to upset them. Developing teaching and evaluation methods to consider patients’ face needs could help in assessing and improving pharmacy students’ communication skills.
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subjects Communication skills
Conversation analysis
Objective structured clinical examination (OSCE)
Pharmacy education
Politeness Theory
title An Applied Linguistics Study of How Students Prevent Embarrassments and Impositions During Interactive Examination OSCEs
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