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Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 16-23 (January 2009)


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Desperately seeking sociology: Nursing student perceptions of sociology on nursing courses

Alison Edgley, Stephen TimmonsCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Brian Crosbie

Accepted 18 June 2008. published online 15 August 2008.

Summary 

This paper will present the findings of a qualitative study exploring the perceptions of students confronted by a requirement to learn sociology within a nursing curriculum. Those teaching sociology have a variety of explanations (more or less desperate), seeking to justify its place on the nursing curriculum. While there may be no resolution to the debate, the dispute thus far, has largely been between sociology and nursing academics. Absent from this debate are the voices of students ‘required’ to learn both nursing and sociology. What do students make of this contested territory? When students are trying to learn their trade, and know how to practice safely and efficaciously what do they make of the sociological imagination? How realistic is it to expect students to grasp both the concrete and practical with the imaginative and critical?

Findings from this qualitative, focus group study suggest that students do indeed find learning sociology within a nursing curriculum “unsettling”. It would seem that students cope in a number of ways. They fragment and compartmentalise knowledge(s); they privilege the interception of experiential learning on the path between theory and practice; and yet they appear to employ sociological understanding to account for nursing’s gendered and developing professional status.

School of Nursing, Queen’s Medical Centre, University of Nottingham Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +44 115 8230897; fax: +44 115 9709955.

PII: S0260-6917(08)00070-1

doi:10.1016/j.nedt.2008.06.001


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