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Interprofessional learning at work: What spatial theory can tell us about workplace learning in an acute care ward

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Author(s)
Gregory, LR
Hopwood, N
Boud, D
Keywords
Nursing
Humans
Interdisciplinary Communication
Learning
Models, Theoretical
Qualitative Research
Education, Continuing
Inservice Training
Nursing Staff, Hospital
Workplace
Hospitals, Teaching
Hospital Units
Interviews as Topic
Education, Continuing
Hospital Units
Hospitals, Teaching
Humans
Inservice Training
Interdisciplinary Communication
Interviews as Topic
Learning
Models, Theoretical
Nursing Staff, Hospital
Qualitative Research
Workplace
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/441161
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10453/30334
Abstract
It is widely recognized that every workplace potentially provides a rich source of learning. Studies focusing on health care contexts have shown that social interaction within and between professions is crucial in enabling professionals to learn through work, address problems and cope with challenges of clinical practice. While hospital environments are beginning to be understood in spatial terms, the links between space and interprofessional learning at work have not been explored. This paper draws on Lefebvre's tri-partite theoretical framework of perceived, conceived and lived space to enrich understandings of interprofessional learning on an acute care ward in an Australian teaching hospital. Qualitative analysis was undertaken using data from observations of Registered Nurses at work and semi-structured interviews linked to observed events. The paper focuses on a ward round, the medical workroom and the Registrar's room, comparing and contrasting the intended (conceived), practiced (perceived) and pedagogically experienced (lived) spatial dimensions. The paper concludes that spatial theory has much to offer understandings of interprofessional learning in work, and the features of work environments and daily practices that produce spaces that enable or constrain learning. © 2014 Informa UK Ltd.
Date
2014-01-01
Type
Journal Article
Identifier
oai:opus.lib.uts.edu.au:10453/30334
Journal of Interprofessional Care, 2014, 28 (3), pp. 200 - 205
1356-1820
http://hdl.handle.net/10453/30334
http://hdl.handle.net/10453/30334
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Ethics in Higher Education

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