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Listening to stories: Valuing knowledge from patient experience
Abstract
This
paper reports on a research project which explored students'
perceptions of learning from listening to patient stories. There is a
plethora of literature to support the value of learning from service
users within professional education programmes and a growing body of
literature suggesting that storytelling is an effective learning and
teaching strategy. However, little evidence focuses on the process of
learning from patients' stories during practice placements and this
study was designed to address this knowledge gap. The study adopted a
descriptive phenomenological approach employing in-depth, conversational
interviews with a sample of twelve pre-qualifying nursing, midwifery
and social work students. The findings confirm the value of service
users as a resource for student learning and indicate that listening to
patient stories was a strategy which all respondents adopted to access
this source of knowledge. This paper recommends that educators should
recognise and value this alternative form of knowledge; provide the
space and opportunities for students to listen to stories during their
placements and actively facilitate reflection on these learning
experiences.
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