Qualitative study of the impact of an authentic electronic portfolio in undergraduate medical education
Qualitative study of the impact of an authentic electronic portfolio in undergraduate medical education
BACKGROUND: Portfolios are increasingly used in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education. Four medical schools have collaborated with an established NHS electronic portfolio provider to develop and implement an authentic professional electronic portfolio for undergraduate students. We hypothesized that using an authentic portfolio would have significant advantages for students, particularly in familiarizing them with the tool many will continue to use for years after graduation. This paper describes the early evaluation of this undergraduate portfolio at two participating medical schools.
METHODS: To gather data, a questionnaire survey with extensive free text comments was used at School 1, and three focus groups were held at School 2. This paper reports thematic analysis of students' opinions expressed in the free text comments and focus groups.
RESULTS: Five main themes, common across both schools were identified. These concerned the purpose, use and acceptability of the portfolio, advantages of and barriers to the use of the portfolio, and the impacts on both learning and professional identity.
CONCLUSIONS: An authentic portfolio mitigated some of the negative aspects of using a portfolio, and had a positive effect on students' perception of themselves as becoming past of the profession. However, significant barriers to portfolio use remained, including a lack of understanding of the purpose of a portfolio and a perceived damaging effect on feedback.
Attitude, Documentation, Education, Medical, Undergraduate/methods, Educational Measurement, Humans, Learning, Professional Competence, Qualitative Research, Students, Medical/psychology
265
Belcher, Rosie
57c54c7b-bf8a-4ce1-95c0-70969bbd80c9
Jones, Anna
cc298a11-814d-4f41-b91b-f5229d54da76
Smith, Laura-Jane
719d303d-4279-4c8a-b38a-adbbbf33bb44
Vincent, Tim
7ece2603-56e0-4b1f-a341-cd7ab5e90941
Naidu, Sindhu Bhaarrati
84e78d17-91a2-48bf-a004-7f32b2a630db
Montgomery, Julia
e2639e38-60c5-4f26-a761-d88bde2fdca5
Haq, Inam
bbb5c7c7-b5c8-4b76-9da7-143036ce961a
Gill, Deborah
7efe669f-45e8-45d3-ab30-8717653353ca
17 December 2014
Belcher, Rosie
57c54c7b-bf8a-4ce1-95c0-70969bbd80c9
Jones, Anna
cc298a11-814d-4f41-b91b-f5229d54da76
Smith, Laura-Jane
719d303d-4279-4c8a-b38a-adbbbf33bb44
Vincent, Tim
7ece2603-56e0-4b1f-a341-cd7ab5e90941
Naidu, Sindhu Bhaarrati
84e78d17-91a2-48bf-a004-7f32b2a630db
Montgomery, Julia
e2639e38-60c5-4f26-a761-d88bde2fdca5
Haq, Inam
bbb5c7c7-b5c8-4b76-9da7-143036ce961a
Gill, Deborah
7efe669f-45e8-45d3-ab30-8717653353ca
Belcher, Rosie, Jones, Anna, Smith, Laura-Jane, Vincent, Tim, Naidu, Sindhu Bhaarrati, Montgomery, Julia, Haq, Inam and Gill, Deborah
(2014)
Qualitative study of the impact of an authentic electronic portfolio in undergraduate medical education.
BMC Medical Education, 14, .
(doi:10.1186/s12909-014-0265-2).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Portfolios are increasingly used in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education. Four medical schools have collaborated with an established NHS electronic portfolio provider to develop and implement an authentic professional electronic portfolio for undergraduate students. We hypothesized that using an authentic portfolio would have significant advantages for students, particularly in familiarizing them with the tool many will continue to use for years after graduation. This paper describes the early evaluation of this undergraduate portfolio at two participating medical schools.
METHODS: To gather data, a questionnaire survey with extensive free text comments was used at School 1, and three focus groups were held at School 2. This paper reports thematic analysis of students' opinions expressed in the free text comments and focus groups.
RESULTS: Five main themes, common across both schools were identified. These concerned the purpose, use and acceptability of the portfolio, advantages of and barriers to the use of the portfolio, and the impacts on both learning and professional identity.
CONCLUSIONS: An authentic portfolio mitigated some of the negative aspects of using a portfolio, and had a positive effect on students' perception of themselves as becoming past of the profession. However, significant barriers to portfolio use remained, including a lack of understanding of the purpose of a portfolio and a perceived damaging effect on feedback.
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Published date: 17 December 2014
Keywords:
Attitude, Documentation, Education, Medical, Undergraduate/methods, Educational Measurement, Humans, Learning, Professional Competence, Qualitative Research, Students, Medical/psychology
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Local EPrints ID: 502805
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502805
ISSN: 1472-6920
PURE UUID: 612672b1-7fb0-43ec-9110-87d45c2ac82d
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Date deposited: 08 Jul 2025 16:54
Last modified: 09 Jul 2025 02:04
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Author:
Rosie Belcher
Author:
Anna Jones
Author:
Laura-Jane Smith
Author:
Tim Vincent
Author:
Sindhu Bhaarrati Naidu
Author:
Julia Montgomery
Author:
Inam Haq
Author:
Deborah Gill
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