Making power visible: Doing theatre-based status work with nursing students
As part of a senior leadership class in an undergraduate baccalaureate nursing program in the northeastern United States, we conducted an experiential, theater-based workshop designed to increase student awareness of the micro-dynamics of power and the enactment of status in their day-to-day lives....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nurse education in practice 2017-09, Vol.26, p.1-5 |
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description | As part of a senior leadership class in an undergraduate baccalaureate nursing program in the northeastern United States, we conducted an experiential, theater-based workshop designed to increase student awareness of the micro-dynamics of power and the enactment of status in their day-to-day lives. These exercises allowed student participants to embody status and power and understand it in ways that they did not after simply completing assigned readings. At the conclusion of the workshop the participants were asked to reflect on their status habits and the consequences of these habits in a single hand-written page. The participants' reflections showed two interesting trends. The first is that a relatively short workshop dramatically increased participants' awareness of power and status as ever present, including a substantial normative move from seeing using power as being a generally bad thing that can be justified in the interests of the organization's mission to a more neutral stance that power and status are at work in all of our interactions. The second trend that emerged was the tendency for participants to focus on agency-based explanations of power dynamics.
•Theatre exercises allow students to embody status and power dynamics.•Workshop developed a more nuanced understanding of power dynamics in students.•Student tended to offer agency-based explanations for power dynamics. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.nepr.2017.06.003 |
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Academic</collection><jtitle>Nurse education in practice</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Taylor, Steven S.</au><au>Taylor, Rosemary A.</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Making power visible: Doing theatre-based status work with nursing students</atitle><jtitle>Nurse education in practice</jtitle><addtitle>Nurse Educ Pract</addtitle><date>2017-09</date><risdate>2017</risdate><volume>26</volume><spage>1</spage><epage>5</epage><pages>1-5</pages><issn>1471-5953</issn><eissn>1873-5223</eissn><abstract>As part of a senior leadership class in an undergraduate baccalaureate nursing program in the northeastern United States, we conducted an experiential, theater-based workshop designed to increase student awareness of the micro-dynamics of power and the enactment of status in their day-to-day lives. These exercises allowed student participants to embody status and power and understand it in ways that they did not after simply completing assigned readings. At the conclusion of the workshop the participants were asked to reflect on their status habits and the consequences of these habits in a single hand-written page. The participants' reflections showed two interesting trends. The first is that a relatively short workshop dramatically increased participants' awareness of power and status as ever present, including a substantial normative move from seeing using power as being a generally bad thing that can be justified in the interests of the organization's mission to a more neutral stance that power and status are at work in all of our interactions. The second trend that emerged was the tendency for participants to focus on agency-based explanations of power dynamics.
•Theatre exercises allow students to embody status and power dynamics.•Workshop developed a more nuanced understanding of power dynamics in students.•Student tended to offer agency-based explanations for power dynamics.</abstract><cop>Scotland</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><pmid>28644980</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.nepr.2017.06.003</doi><tpages>5</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Actors Attitude of Health Personnel Barriers Collaboration Creative Activities Drama Education Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate - methods Enactment Group Dynamics Habits Handwriting Humans Interviews Leadership Learner Engagement Learning New England Nurses Nursing Nursing education Nursing student Nursing Students Occupational status Power Power (Psychology) Professional Identity Qualitative Research Reflective teaching Status Students Students, Nursing - psychology Surgery Teaching - trends Theater Theaters Theatre Workshops |
title | Making power visible: Doing theatre-based status work with nursing students |
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