Bringing a novel to practice: An interpretive study of reading a novel in an undergraduate nursing practicum course
Novels are one humanities resource available to educators in health disciplines to support student reflection on their own professional practice and therapeutic relationships with patients. An interdisciplinary team, including nurses, a physician, and an English instructor, carried out an interpreti...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nurse education in practice 2017-05, Vol.24, p.84-89 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Novels are one humanities resource available to educators in health disciplines to support student reflection on their own professional practice and therapeutic relationships with patients. An interdisciplinary team, including nurses, a physician, and an English instructor, carried out an interpretive study of the use of a novel by clinical nursing instructors in an undergraduate practicum course. Students placed in assisted living or long term care facilities for the elderly were expected to read a contemporary work, Exit Lines, by Joan Barfoot, which is set in a comparable facility. The objective was to increase understanding of the meanings that participants ascribed to the novel reading exercise in relation to their development as student nurses. By using a hermeneutic approach, we used dialogue throughout the study to elicit perspectives among participants and the interdisciplinary research team. Major themes that emerged included the students’ tacit awareness of epistemological plurality in nursing, and the consequent importance of cultivating a capacity to move thoughtfully between different points of view and ways of knowing.
•An interpretive study of using a novel in a nursing practicum course.•Students reflected on their practice in the light of a fictional narrative.•Students began to identify different ways of knowing for nursing practice.•Multidisciplinary team expertise enhanced the learning experience. |
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ISSN: | 1471-5953 1873-5223 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.nepr.2017.04.001 |