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Heroic Acts in Humble Shoes: America's Nurses Tell Their Stories


Online Advanced Release
Transformative Learning as Context for Human Patient Simulation
Journal of Nursing Education
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Brian Parker, RN, RPN, BScN and Florence Myrick, RN, PhD

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Received: July 21, 2009; Accepted: September 24, 2009; Posted: March 1, 2010

Nurse educators are charged with the responsibility of empowering novice nurses to become autonomous thinkers with the capacity to cope with the many challenges of modern day practice. Human patient simulation is a powerful technology-based educational tool ideally suited for the application of emancipatory pedagogies that aid in the transformation of individual meaning schemes. Transformative learning theory provides educators with the tools to empower students to challenge their preconceived beliefs, assumptions, and values and socialize them appropriately to thrive in modern day clinical practice. The purpose of this article is to critically analyze the role of clinical scenarios using human patient simulation to promote transformative learning events in undergraduate nursing education. The authors focus on the role of debriefing in the promotion of the critical reflection and social discourse that is integral to the learning process and the implementation of scenarios that provide students with disorientating dilemmas for perspective transformation.

doi:10.3928/01484834-20100224-02


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