Exploring ways to improve descriptions of occupational therapy

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Author(s)
Di Tommaso, Amelia
Wilding, Clare
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2014
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
An exploratory study using qualitative methods was undertaken to investigate the effectiveness of teaching final year students strategies that were designed to improve their descriptions of occupational therapy. Prior to their last fieldwork experience, four strategies were discussed with eight participating students. The participants tested the approaches during their fieldwork and reported incidences of using them to the researcher. Three strategies were found to be helpful and they contributed to participants' feelings of increased confidence when explaining occupational therapy to others. Specifically teaching techniques ...
View more >An exploratory study using qualitative methods was undertaken to investigate the effectiveness of teaching final year students strategies that were designed to improve their descriptions of occupational therapy. Prior to their last fieldwork experience, four strategies were discussed with eight participating students. The participants tested the approaches during their fieldwork and reported incidences of using them to the researcher. Three strategies were found to be helpful and they contributed to participants' feelings of increased confidence when explaining occupational therapy to others. Specifically teaching techniques for articulating occupational therapy may assist students to be more self-assured. Supervisors can support or hinder this process.
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View more >An exploratory study using qualitative methods was undertaken to investigate the effectiveness of teaching final year students strategies that were designed to improve their descriptions of occupational therapy. Prior to their last fieldwork experience, four strategies were discussed with eight participating students. The participants tested the approaches during their fieldwork and reported incidences of using them to the researcher. Three strategies were found to be helpful and they contributed to participants' feelings of increased confidence when explaining occupational therapy to others. Specifically teaching techniques for articulating occupational therapy may assist students to be more self-assured. Supervisors can support or hinder this process.
View less >
Journal Title
New Zealand Journal of Occupational Therapy
Volume
61
Issue
1
Copyright Statement
© 2014 Occupational Therapy New Zealand Whakaora Ngangahau Aotearoa. This paper has been published in the New Zealand Journal of Occupational Therapy, 59(1), April 2012 by Occupational Therapy New Zealand Whakaora Ngangahau Aotearoa. All rights reserved.
Subject
Clinical Sciences not elsewhere classified
Clinical Sciences