Gentle interruptions: Transformative approaches to clinical teaching

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Author(s)
McAllister, Margaret
Tower, Marion
Walker, Rachel
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Christine A. Tanner

Date
2007
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Abstract

This conceptual article, drawn from the authors' shared teaching experiences and recent student and clinician evaluation data, set out to reveal and then address some common problems faced by clinical educators and nursing students in the time-constrained, complex, specialized field of clinical learning. We explain and argue the benefits of transformative learning and outline specific strategies for building skills in transformative education, such as interrogating clinical routines and habits, teaching diplomacy skills, and using a process of interruption. Clinical educators can use these strategies to move beyond unwittingly serving the status quo toward consciously contributing to change.

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Journal of Nursing Education

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46

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7

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© 2007 SLACK Inc. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.

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Subject

Nursing

Curriculum and pedagogy

Midwifery

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