‘I now have a visual image in my mind and it is something I will never forget’: an analysis of an arts-informed approach to health professions ethics education

This paper reports on a study of an arts informed approach to ethics education in a health professions education context. The purpose of this study was to investigate students’ reported learning experiences as a result of engagement with an arts-informed project in a health professions’ ethics cours...

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Published inAdvances in health sciences education : theory and practice Vol. 21; no. 2; pp. 303 - 322
Main Authors Kinsella, Elizabeth Anne, Bidinosti, Susan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 01.05.2016
Springer
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:This paper reports on a study of an arts informed approach to ethics education in a health professions education context. The purpose of this study was to investigate students’ reported learning experiences as a result of engagement with an arts-informed project in a health professions’ ethics course. A hermeneutic phenomenological methodological approach was adopted for the study. The data were collected over 5 years, and involved analysis of 234 occupational therapy students’ written reflections on learning. Phenomenological methods were used. Five key themes were identified with respect to students’ reported learning including: becoming aware of values, (re) discovering creativity, coming to value reflection in professional life, deepening self-awareness, and developing capacities to imagine future practices. There appear to be a number of unique ways in which arts-informed approaches can contribute to health professions education including: activating imaginative engagement, fostering interpretive capacity, inspiring transformative understandings, offering new ways of knowing, deepening reflection, and heightening consciousness, while also enriching the inner life of practitioners. Innovative approaches are being used to introduce arts-informed practices in health professions curricula programs. The findings point to the promise of arts-informed approaches for advancing health sciences education.
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ISSN:1382-4996
1573-1677
DOI:10.1007/s10459-015-9628-7