학술논문

'Understanding where you're coming from': Discovering an [inter]professional identity through becoming a peer facilitator.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Interprofessional Care. Nov2012, Vol. 26 Issue 6, p459-464. 6p.
Subject
*INTERDISCIPLINARY education
*INTERVIEWING
*RESEARCH methodology
*RESEARCH funding
*SELF-perception
*SOUND recordings
*QUALITATIVE research
*AFFINITY groups
*HEALTH occupations students
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*PSYCHOLOGY
Language
ISSN
1356-1820
Abstract
Peer facilitation offers an innovative and effective means of promoting interprofessional learning (IPL) between health and social care students. This paper highlights the benefits that peer facilitators themselves experience from involvement in assisting junior colleagues to engage with IPL in an online context. The setting for the inquiry is an online interprofessional learning pathway shared by two higher education institutions in the UK. Insights have been developed over a 3-year period through collaborative inquiry with 41 peer facilitators, academic tutors and the students who benefitted from their input. This paper which focuses on peer facilitators' application data, interview data and written reflections explores the instrumental, cognitive and personal gains experienced. However, more fundamentally, theorizing findings in relation to identity theory we substantiate the claim that the role provides opportunity for testing and refining important aspects of both professional and interprofessional identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]