Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/6426
Type: Journal article
Title: Ethical enculturation: the informal and hidden ethics curricula at an Australian Medical School
Author: West, C.
Chur-Hansen, A.
Citation: Focus on Health Professional Education, 2004; 6(1):85-99
Publisher: Australasian and New Zealand Association for Medical Education
Issue Date: 2004
ISSN: 1442-1100
Statement of
Responsibility: 
C. West and A. Chur-Hansen
Abstract: The formal ethics curriculum taught in medical schools is underscored by the informal and hidden curricula – that which is learned outside of the classroom or ward round, and which is often implied rather than explicit. Medical students' ethical and moral development is influenced by these curricula, although they have not been subject to the same scrutiny as the formal curriculum in previous research. The objective of this study was to explore University of Adelaide medical students' opinions of their ethical experiences, focusing on the informal and hidden curricula, and the perceived impact of these on their ethical development. Six undergraduates in their fourth year of a six-year course participated in an open-ended interview. Transcriptions were subjected to a qualitative methodology, Framework analysis, which extracts themes from the data. Seven interconnected themes were found. These were ethical development, the formal ethics curriculum, role- modelling, compromise, speaking out and keeping quiet, self-interest and guilt. Whilst the results of this study are consistent with that of previous research, a new and as yet unexplored result was the juxtaposition of 'local' students' perceptions of their ethical behaviour with their perceptions of 'international' students' ethical behaviour. From this, it is postulated that the informal and hidden curricula should not be conceptualised as homogeneous, and that further exploration on the basis of culture and sub-culture is warranted to instruct the formal ethics curriculum.
Keywords: Acculturation
Ethical education
Ethics
Hidden curriculum
International students
Medical education
Medical schools
Medical students
Moral development
Student attitudes
University curriculum
Description: © Australasian and New Zealand Association for Medical Education
Published version: http://search.informit.com.au/fullText;dn=136760;res=AEIPT
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 5
Psychiatry publications

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