Unravelling epistemic injustice in medical education: The case of the underperforming learner

Author:

Luong Victoria1ORCID,Ajjawi Rola2ORCID,Burm Sarah1ORCID,Olson Rebecca3ORCID,MacLeod Anna1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Continuing Professional Development and Medical Education Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

2. Centre for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning (CRADLE) Deakin University Melbourne Victoria Australia

3. School of Social Science The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractContextEpistemic injustice refers to a wrong done to someone in their capacity as a knower. While philosophers have detailed the pervasiveness of this issue within healthcare, it is only beginning to be discussed by medical educators. The purpose of this article is to expand the field's understanding of this concept and to demonstrate how it can be used to reframe complex problems in medical education.MethodsAfter outlining the basic features of epistemic injustice, we clarify its intended (and unintended) meaning and detail what is required for a perceived harm to be named an epistemic injustice. Using an example from our own work on introversion in undergraduate medical education, we illustrate what epistemic injustice might look like from the perspectives of both educators and students and show how the concept can reorient our perspective on academic underperformance.ResultsEpistemic injustice results from two things: (1) social power dynamics that give some individuals control over others, and (2) identity prejudice that is associated with discriminatory stereotypes. This can lead to one, or both, forms of epistemic injustice: testimonial and hermeneutical. Our worked example demonstrates how medical educators can be unaware of when and how epistemic injustice is happening, yet the effects on students' well‐being and sense of selves can be profound. Thinking about academic underperformance with epistemic injustice in mind can reveal an emphasis within current educational practices on diagnosing learning deficiencies, to the detriment of holistically representing its socially constructed and structural nature.ConclusionsThis article builds upon recent calls to recognise epistemic injustice in medical education by clarifying its terminology and intended use and providing in‐depth application and analysis to a particular case: underperformance and the introverted medical student. Equipped with a more sophisticated understanding of the term, medical educators may be able to re‐conceptualise long‐standing issues including, but also beyond, underperformance.

Publisher

Wiley

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