This grounded theory study responds to the 21st Century dilemma medical schools encounter as online social networking sites like Facebook reveal more and more about their students---do professionally incongruous online behaviors indicate a lack of essential traits required to be a physician? By contextually situating the inquiry at one medical school over a period of three years, findings revealed the main concerns students had regarding professionalism as it relates to Facebook and detailed strategies employed to resolve those concerns as a substantive theory of digital identity dissonance. Participants revealed an awareness of desired behaviors espoused by professionalism expectations, but discovery of a looped pattern of telling demonstrated a reactive reasoning process seemingly incompatible with institutional norms but indicative of identity acquisition tension. Theoretical conceptualization of the data expanded Bourdieu's notion of habitus to a novel concept of Facebook Native Habitus (FBNH). Identity guarding emerged in analysis as a basic social process characterized by a reactive reasoning process through which enculturated members of a group negotiate thoughts and feelings perceived to be incongruent with in-group expectations. Identity guarding is a subconscious strategy used in managing presentation of self and is the formal theory developed in this study.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:CHENGCHI/U0003483185 |
Creators | Szumski, Meredith Kay. |
Publisher | University of California, Los Angeles. |
Source Sets | National Chengchi University Libraries |
Detected Language | English |
Type | text |
Rights | Copyright © nccu library on behalf of the copyright holders |
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