Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kathrin Kaufhold is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kathrin Kaufhold.


London Review of Education | 2017

Tracing Interacting Literacy Practices in Master's Dissertation Writing.

Kathrin Kaufhold

Academic literacy practices are increasingly varied, influenced by the diverse education and language backgrounds of students and staff, interdisciplinary approaches, and collaborations with non-un ...


BMJ Open | 2016

Implications of aligning full registration of doctors with medical school graduation: a qualitative study of stakeholder perspectives

Karen Mattick; Kathrin Kaufhold; Narcie Kelly; Judith Cole; Grit Scheffler; Charlotte E. Rees; Alison Deborah Bullock; Gerard Gormley; Lynn V Monrouxe

Objectives The Shape of Training report recommended that full registration is aligned with medical school graduation. As part of a General Medical Council-funded study about the preparedness for practice of UK medical graduates, we explored UK stakeholders’ views about this proposal using qualitative interviews (30 group and 87 individual interviews) and Framework Analysis. Setting Four UK study sites, one in each country. Participants 185 individuals from eight stakeholder groups: (1) foundation year 1 (F1) doctors (n=34); (2) fully registered trainee doctors (n=33); (3) clinical educators (n=32); (4) undergraduate/postgraduate Deans, and Foundation Programme Directors (n=30); (5) other healthcare professionals (n=13); (6) employers (n=7); (7) policy and government (n=11); (8) patient and public representatives (n=25). Results We identified four main themes: (1) The F1 year as a safety net: patients were protected by close trainee supervision and ‘sign off’ to prevent errors; trainees were provided with a safe environment for learning on the job; (2) Implications for undergraduate medical education: if the proposal was accepted, a ‘radical review’ of undergraduate curricula would be needed; undergraduate education might need to be longer; (3) Implications for F1 work practice: steps to protect healthcare team integration and ensure that F1 doctors stay within competency limits would be required; (4) Financial, structural and political implications: there would be cost implications for trainees; clarification of responsibilities between undergraduate and postgraduate medical education would be needed. Typically, each theme comprised arguments for and against the proposal. Conclusions A policy change to align the timing of full registration with graduation would require considerable planning and preliminary work. These findings will inform policymakers’ decision-making. Regardless of the decision, medical students should take on greater responsibility for patient care as undergraduates, assessment methods in clinical practice and professionalism domains need development, and good practice in postgraduate supervision and support must be shared.


BMJ Open | 2018

New graduate doctors’ preparedness for practice: a multistakeholder, multicentre narrative study

Lynn V Monrouxe; Alison Deborah Bullock; Gerard Gormley; Kathrin Kaufhold; Narcie Kelly; Camille Emilie Roberts; Karen Mattick; Charlotte E. Rees

Objective While previous studies have begun to explore newly graduated junior doctors’ preparedness for practice, findings are largely based on simplistic survey data or perceptions of newly graduated junior doctors and their clinical supervisors alone. This study explores, in a deeper manner, multiple stakeholders’ conceptualisations of what it means to be prepared for practice and their perceptions about newly graduated junior doctors’ preparedness (or unpreparedness) using innovative qualitative methods. Design A multistakeholder, multicentre qualitative study including narrative interviews and longitudinal audio diaries. Setting Four UK settings: England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Participants Eight stakeholder groups comprising n=185 participants engaged in 101 narrative interviews (27 group and 84 individual). Twenty-six junior doctors in their first year postgraduation also provided audio diaries over a 3-month period. Results We identified 2186 narratives across all participants (506 classified as ‘prepared’, 663 as ‘unprepared’, 951 as ‘general’). Seven themes were identified; this paper focuses on two themes pertinent to our research questions: (1) explicit conceptualisations of preparedness for practice; and (2) newly graduated junior doctors’ preparedness for the General Medical Council’s (GMC) outcomes for graduates. Stakeholders’ conceptualisations of preparedness for practice included short-term (hitting the ground running) and long-term preparedness, alongside being prepared for practical and emotional aspects. Stakeholders’ perceptions of medical graduates’ preparedness for practice varied across different GMC outcomes for graduates (eg, Doctor as Scholar and Scientist, as Practitioner, as Professional) and across stakeholders (eg, newly graduated doctors sometimes perceived themselves as prepared but others did not). Conclusion Our narrative findings highlight the complexities and nuances surrounding new medical graduates’ preparedness for practice. We encourage stakeholders to develop a shared understanding (and realistic expectations) of new medical graduates’ preparedness. We invite medical school leaders to increase the proportion of time that medical students spend participating meaningfully in multiprofessional teams during workplace learning.


Teaching in Higher Education | 2016

English for Specific Purposes and Academic Literacies: eclecticism in academic writing pedagogy

Lisa McGrath; Kathrin Kaufhold

ABSTRACT Academic Literacies and English for Specific Purposes perspectives on the teaching of academic writing tend to be positioned as dichotomous and ideologically incompatible. Nonetheless, recent studies have called for the integration of these two perspectives in the design of writing programmes in order to meet the needs of students in the increasingly diverse and shifting landscape of academia. The aim of the present paper is to reflect on how this theoretical integration could be put into practice. Drawing on the design of a research-based writing workshop for postgraduate anthropology students, we argue that rather than a ‘hybrid’ model of writing pedagogy, a theoretically grounded but eclectic approach is needed in order to respond to students’ personal, local, and disciplinary contexts.


Language in Society | 2014

Amy D. Clark &Nancy M. Hayward (eds.),Talking Appalachian: Voice, identity, and community.Lexington:University Press of Kentucky,2013. Pp. x, 256. Hb.

Kathrin Kaufhold

Review: AMY D. CLARK&NANCY M. HAYWARD (eds.), Talking Appalachian: Voice, identity,and community. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2013


Archive | 2014

50.

Lynn V Monrouxe; Alison Deborah Bullock; Judith Cole; Gerard Gormley; Kathrin Kaufhold; Narcie Kelly; Karen Mattick; Charlotte E. Rees; Grit Scheffler


Journal of English for Academic Purposes | 2015

How Prepared are UK Medical Graduates for Practice? Final report from a programme of research commissioned by the General Medical Council

Kathrin Kaufhold


Writing & Pedagogy | 2017

Conventions in postgraduate academic writing : European students' negotiations of prior writing experience at an English speaking university

Kathrin Kaufhold


Linguistics and Education | 2018

Interdisciplinary postgraduate writing: Developing genre knowledge

Kathrin Kaufhold


PRISEAL 3, Researching, teaching and supporting research communication: Perspectives and prospects, Coimbra, Portugal, October 30 - November 1, 2015 | 2015

Creating translanguaging spaces in students’ academic writing practices

Kathrin Kaufhold; Lisa McGrath

Collaboration


Dive into the Kathrin Kaufhold's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lynn V Monrouxe

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerard Gormley

Queen's University Belfast

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Grit Scheffler

Royal College of Physicians

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Judith Cole

Queen's University Belfast

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lisa McGrath

Sheffield Hallam University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge