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Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town

Clinical education in the profession of Physiotherapy involves the teaching and training of students in real life clinical settings such as hospitals and clinics. The pedagogical support that Physiotherapy students receive in clinical settings is both formal and informal (Dornan, 2012). In the South...

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Main Author: Timothy, Nastassia
Other Authors: Pienaar, Lunelle
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Health Sciences Education 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Timothy, Nastassia
author2 Pienaar, Lunelle
author_browse Pienaar, Lunelle
Timothy, Nastassia
author_facet Pienaar, Lunelle
Timothy, Nastassia
author_sort Timothy, Nastassia
collection Thesis
description Clinical education in the profession of Physiotherapy involves the teaching and training of students in real life clinical settings such as hospitals and clinics. The pedagogical support that Physiotherapy students receive in clinical settings is both formal and informal (Dornan, 2012). In the South African context and at the University of Cape Town (UCT), educational and professional support is provided to Physiotherapy students by both academic representatives from the university, clinical educators, and physiotherapy clinicians who are employed by the clinical site in which the clinical education occurs. The phenomenon of clinical education in Physiotherapy is well described in literature emanating from the global North, with fewer studies focused on the learning experiences of students in the South African context. Aligning with the need for curriculum transformation, specifically in this study landscape which is Physiotherapy at UCT, a better understanding of learning on the clinical platform is warranted. This study was conceptualised and conducted through an interpretivist lens and by drawing on the theoretical underpinnings of Lave and Wenger's (1991) Situated Learning Theory (SLT) and Communities of Practice (CoP). Encompassed within SLT is an understanding that learning is not isolated and internal but rather a social process which is dependent on interactions with others and the context in which the learning takes place (Jackson, 2007). Thus this study set out to determine how sociocultural and contextual elements influence learning experiences of final year Physiotherapy students during their clinical placements. This was done by the use of a qualitative, cross-sectional exploratory study design as this was determined to best capture the experiences of students (Austin & Sutton, 2014). Research data was collected by the use of both video diaries and follow-up semi-structured interviews with the six study participants. Discourse Analysis was used to analyse the data, using an analysis framework informed by concepts from both the theoretical framework and the literature review. The study results signify that for this cohort of participants, sociocultural influences, including influences of participation in the clinical site and the interactions and relationships with others, were more important than contextual influences such as the physical learning environment. Unanticipated findings included emotional and mental wellbeing and issues of power related to the physiotherapy clinician. Three main themes emerged from the evaluation of the study findings. Theme one: Student attributes and approach to learning; Theme two: Teacher attributes, skill and power and Theme three: Resources and support at clinical placement site. These themes were able to answer the research question for the study. What has been determined in this research study is that Physiotherapy students bring their own personal and learning attributes to the clinical placement which contribute to their development as a student physiotherapist and their ability to engage actively with learning opportunities. In addition the teacher, either a clinician or clinical educator, must have certain preferable qualities which allows for the development of good relationships between teacher and student, as well as fostering the student's ability to be agentic in maximising learning opportunities. Furthermore the study demonstrated that supported participation in physiotherapy practice allowed participants to learn, thus necessitating that the clinical site possess a culture which is accepting of students and their clinical learning. It is therefore of utmost importance that any limitation to student participation be addressed with urgency at the institution. Appropriate clinical sites must also be considered carefully in relation to the demands of the curriculum, the needs of Physiotherapy as a profession and the institutional culture of the placement.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37366 Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town Timothy, Nastassia Pienaar, Lunelle Manie, Shamila Health Sciences Education Clinical education in the profession of Physiotherapy involves the teaching and training of students in real life clinical settings such as hospitals and clinics. The pedagogical support that Physiotherapy students receive in clinical settings is both formal and informal (Dornan, 2012). In the South African context and at the University of Cape Town (UCT), educational and professional support is provided to Physiotherapy students by both academic representatives from the university, clinical educators, and physiotherapy clinicians who are employed by the clinical site in which the clinical education occurs. The phenomenon of clinical education in Physiotherapy is well described in literature emanating from the global North, with fewer studies focused on the learning experiences of students in the South African context. Aligning with the need for curriculum transformation, specifically in this study landscape which is Physiotherapy at UCT, a better understanding of learning on the clinical platform is warranted. This study was conceptualised and conducted through an interpretivist lens and by drawing on the theoretical underpinnings of Lave and Wenger's (1991) Situated Learning Theory (SLT) and Communities of Practice (CoP). Encompassed within SLT is an understanding that learning is not isolated and internal but rather a social process which is dependent on interactions with others and the context in which the learning takes place (Jackson, 2007). Thus this study set out to determine how sociocultural and contextual elements influence learning experiences of final year Physiotherapy students during their clinical placements. This was done by the use of a qualitative, cross-sectional exploratory study design as this was determined to best capture the experiences of students (Austin & Sutton, 2014). Research data was collected by the use of both video diaries and follow-up semi-structured interviews with the six study participants. Discourse Analysis was used to analyse the data, using an analysis framework informed by concepts from both the theoretical framework and the literature review. The study results signify that for this cohort of participants, sociocultural influences, including influences of participation in the clinical site and the interactions and relationships with others, were more important than contextual influences such as the physical learning environment. Unanticipated findings included emotional and mental wellbeing and issues of power related to the physiotherapy clinician. Three main themes emerged from the evaluation of the study findings. Theme one: Student attributes and approach to learning; Theme two: Teacher attributes, skill and power and Theme three: Resources and support at clinical placement site. These themes were able to answer the research question for the study. What has been determined in this research study is that Physiotherapy students bring their own personal and learning attributes to the clinical placement which contribute to their development as a student physiotherapist and their ability to engage actively with learning opportunities. In addition the teacher, either a clinician or clinical educator, must have certain preferable qualities which allows for the development of good relationships between teacher and student, as well as fostering the student's ability to be agentic in maximising learning opportunities. Furthermore the study demonstrated that supported participation in physiotherapy practice allowed participants to learn, thus necessitating that the clinical site possess a culture which is accepting of students and their clinical learning. It is therefore of utmost importance that any limitation to student participation be addressed with urgency at the institution. Appropriate clinical sites must also be considered carefully in relation to the demands of the curriculum, the needs of Physiotherapy as a profession and the institutional culture of the placement. 2023-03-13T09:29:31Z 2023-03-13T09:29:31Z 2022 2023-02-21T07:24:16Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37366 eng application/pdf Department of Health Sciences Education Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Health Sciences Education
Timothy, Nastassia
Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town
title_full Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town
title_fullStr Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town
title_short Clinical education in physiotherapy: The experiences of final year students workplace-based learning at the University of Cape Town
title_sort clinical education in physiotherapy the experiences of final year students workplace based learning at the university of cape town
topic Health Sciences Education
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37366
work_keys_str_mv AT timothynastassia clinicaleducationinphysiotherapytheexperiencesoffinalyearstudentsworkplacebasedlearningattheuniversityofcapetown