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Dramatic Effect: Enhancing Nurse Education Through Performance

Hoyle, Louise; Bastow, Fiona; Mahoney, Catherine; Kyle, Richard; Veitch, Linda

Authors

Louise Hoyle

Richard Kyle

Linda Veitch



Abstract

Health and social care education programmes use the ‘professional world’ to enhance authentic learning. This real-word learning is one of the most powerful pedagogical experiences a student can have. Authentic learning employs innovative and motivational real life processes, which allow students to pursue unique individual learning opportunities (Educational Research, 2007). Finding creative ways to enable students to ‘step into someone else’s shoes’ as a learning and teaching approach is central to the process of fostering feelings of empathy and compassion within healthcare students, that lie at the heart of care (Kyle and Atherton, 2016). Furthermore, the use of drama has been shown to be an effective strategy for enhancing learning in entry level courses (Arveklev et al.2015). Within the School of Health and Social Care at Edinburgh Napier University, we have adopted innovative approaches to authentic learning to enhance engagement and understanding of social sciences, specifically the integration of health and social care.
In October 2017, six students from the Bachelor of Nursing and Masters in Nursing Programmes volunteered to form a drama group ‘The School of Health and Social Care Players’. Students were invited to prepare and perform the drama ‘Mad, Bad, Invisible’ based on a real-life story about one woman’s experience of dis-integrated care. This was achieved in partnership with the charity Comas (a social innovation charity). The play was performed in November 2017 at Serenity Café in Edinburgh, a community café run by and for people in recovery from substance use. The drama was followed by a debate that invited the audience to discuss the concept of health and social care integration. A cartoonist and photographer were hired to capture the essence of the play and debate, and a video recording of the play was made. These materials are being fed forward into social science modules on the undergraduate nursing and Allied Health Professional Programmes in the University. The event was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) as part of the annual Festival of Social Science.
All the students who took part expressed both personal and professional privilege at being able to ‘step into another person’s shoes’. They reported being able to ‘explore a different perspective’ from that of the professional one. ‘Getting a glimpse’ into the world of the people they care for was considered especially important, as was the value and significance of performing and stimulating debate in an authentic public setting. Being able to relate to emotions that people, their families and other care workers have experienced was reported to be a ‘highly meaningful’ learning experience.
This project demonstrates the value of drama to further the understanding of the ‘lived experience of care’ for health and social care students. Moreover, it demonstrates the application of an innovative and evidence-based approach to learning and teaching a complex concept such as health and social care integration. This approach moves away from the didactic model in favour of encouraging students to explore, innovate and express themselves. It provides an example of the value of collaboration with external agencies and people from low socio-economic groups, in environments which offer real-life learning for student nurses. This project demonstrates valuable approach to collaborative ‘real life’ education that can be applied locally, nationally and internationally.

References:
Arveklev, SH, Wigent, H, Berg, L, Burton, B. and Lepp, M. (2015). The use and application of drama in nursing education; an integrative review of the literature. Nurse Educ Today. 35(7)
Educational Research (2007) The four characteristics of authentic learning. https://www.ernweb.com/educational-research-articles/the-four-characteristics-of-authentic-learning/
Kyle, R and Atherton, I (2016) Biogeography as critical nursing pedagogy: Breathing life into nurse education. Nurse Education in Practice. 20 pp76-79

Citation

Hoyle, L., Bastow, F., Mahoney, C., Kyle, R., & Veitch, L. (2017, December). Dramatic Effect: Enhancing Nurse Education Through Performance

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (unpublished)
Start Date Dec 12, 2017
End Date Dec 15, 2017
Deposit Date Apr 26, 2020
Keywords Education Drama, Authentic Learning
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2655638