- Title
- Exploring and developing student midwives' experiences (ESME) - An appreciative inquiry study
- Creator
- Dewar, Belinda; Stulz, Virginia; Drayton, Nicola; Buliak, Alexa; Connolly, Louise; McLaughlin, Karen; Newport, Katie; Rebolledo, Susan; Stephenson, Loraine; MacBride, Tasmin; Lennon, Kelley
- Relation
- Midwifery Vol. 91, Issue December 2020, no. 102844
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.midw.2020.102844
- Publisher
- Churchill Livingstone
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2020
- Description
- Background: There is increased focus on investing in midwifery students as our future workforce. Inquiring into what helps to support an enriched learning experience for student midwives in clinical placements is timely. Aim: To work collaboratively with key stakeholders (student midwives, midwives) in clinical placements to generate an experience-based understanding of what works well in relation to the student midwife experience and from this understanding, co-create ways to enhance students’ experiences. Design: An appreciative inquiry approach was used to discover what matters and what works well at present in the student midwife experience from the perspective of student midwives, midwives, and midwifery managers and to use this knowledge to create enhanced experiences in the future. Data were generated across four local health districts in New South Wales, Australia. Data were analysed using immersion crystallisation and then mapped to the ‘Senses Framework’. Setting: Four midwifery units in tertiary teaching public hospitals in NSW. Participants: There were 124 participants in this study: 45 midwifery students and 76 employed midwives. Measurements and findings: The data culminated in the refinement of the ‘Senses Framework’ for use in the midwifery learning context. Student midwives and midwives valued experiences that helped them to feel safe, to feel that they belong, to experience continuity in their learning and work, to have a sense of purpose, to have their achievements and their contributions to be recognised and to feel that they matter. Furthermore, the midwives themselves valued the experience of these senses in supporting them to be facilitators of learning in the workplace. The relational framework for learning together in the workplace has the potential to support achievement of the sense of security, belonging, continuity, purpose, achievement and significance for all involved. Key conclusions: There is much to celebrate in what is being achieved currently in promoting excellence in learning experiences in the midwifery context. In particular this study has made conscious the contribution that student midwives and midwives can and do make to enable the positive and reciprocal relationships that develop in the student midwife experience that support the nurturing of enriched learning environments. This study emphasised that learning in the workplace is a relational endeavour, rooted in the day to day engagement between student midwives, midwives and others. By mapping these positive processes to the senses framework these processes are made more explicit and provide guidance for enhancing the learning experience in the midwifery context. Implications for practice: The framework and related inquiry tools developed from the study may be useful in other settings to further test out the impact of this relational approach to learning for student midwives.
- Subject
- student midwives; midwives; appreciative inquiry; learning; relationships
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1422586
- Identifier
- uon:37853
- Identifier
- ISSN:0266-6138
- Rights
- This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
- Language
- eng
- Full Text
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