# An educational psychology perspective on health sciences education research

**Authors:** Evelyn Steinberg, Matthias Stadler

PMC · DOI: 10.3205/zma001798 · GMS Journal for Medical Education · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

This paper discusses challenges in applying educational psychology to health sciences education and suggests solutions like interdisciplinary collaboration and better study designs.

## Contribution

The paper identifies three key challenges in integrating educational psychology into health sciences education and proposes strategies to address them.

## Key findings

- HSE studies often lack clear theoretical foundations due to differences in writing conventions and training.
- Effective study designs in HSE require data from multiple institutions and interdisciplinary collaboration.
- Evidence-based practices in health sciences education need stronger institutional policies and regulations.

## Abstract

The focus of educational research has shifted from teaching to learning. Psychological theories and methods on student learning are increasingly used in health sciences education (HSE) research. However, applying those theories, methods and practices to HSE poses several challenges.

The first challenge relates to theoretical foundations in HSE studies. They are often inadequately described due to differences in writing conventions between psychological and medical disciplines. Moreover, HSE researchers are often trained in medical sciences but not in psychology, leading to potential misconceptions. Interdisciplinary collaboration and more thorough theoretical foundations are essential to overcoming these barriers. The second challenge is implementing effective study designs. HSE research often focuses on improving teaching within individual institutions, but generalizable results require data from multiple institutions. Additionally, HSE researchers without social science training may struggle with study design. Resources for capacity building and systematic educational research are needed, as well as establishing interinstitutional, interdisciplinary networks. The third challenge is the transfer of scientific evidence into educational practice. While it is common sense to provide evidence-based healthcare, less effort is put into providing evidence-based HSE. Quality assurance agencies and ministries can establish regulations pertaining to teacher education to enhance education.

In conclusion, the integration of educational psychology into HSE research poses significant challenges. We need collaborative and interdisciplinary effort, incorporating thorough theoretical frameworks, supportive institutional policies, and effective study designs to address these challenges.

## Full text

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## References

6 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12875048/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12875048