Apr 15, 2021  |  12:00pm - 1:00pm
Workshop/Seminar

Exploring Social Theory Open Forum with Laura Hirshfield PhD

Identity Taxation in Academic Medicine: An examination of the extra labor performed by members of marginalized groups

Laura E. Hirshfield is an Associate Professor of Medical Education and Sociology at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She received her PhD in Sociology from the University of Michigan and her BA from Swarthmore College, where she studied Sociology/Anthropology and Education. Laura works closely with a variety of trainees, including undergraduates, medical students, residents, faculty, and graduate students (both in Health Professions Education and in Sociology). A sociologist and ethnographer by training, Laura is broadly interested in social interaction, identity, education, science, work/organizations, and medicine. Her research centers on gender and other forms of inequality in academic and clinical settings, particularly in the natural sciences and medicine. Her scholarship includes studies focusing on the “hidden labor” undertaken by and expected of members of marginalized groups in the workplace, cultural competence (broadly defined) in medical contexts (particularly related to trans patients), and socialization (especially regarding communication and emotions) in medical school. 

Laura is the co-director of the PhD program in Curriculum Studies/HPE and the Associate Director of Graduate Studies for DME. Laura is course director for MHPE 504 (Leadership in Health Profession Education), and two electives (Leadership & Professional Identity and Interviewing & Ethnographic Methods). In the UGME & GME curriculum, she teaches primarily about inequality, identity, and bias, as well as patient-centered communication and empathy. Finally, Laura is a founding member of the Sociologists for Health Professions Education (soc-hpe.com), a group that aims to bridge disciplinary divides between health professions educators and sociologists.

This Virtual Open Forum is a text-based discussion.  

Reading: Laura E. Hirshfield & Tiffany D. Joseph (2012) ‘We need a woman, we need a black woman’: gender, race, and identity taxation in the academy. Gender and Education. 24 (2), 213–227

Contact

Patti Leake
pleake@michener.ca