Facilitating online reflective learning for health and social care professionals
Facilitating online reflective learning for health and social care professionals
Health and social care education has a long established association with reflective learning as a way of developing post-qualifying professional practice. Reflective learning is also a key feature of self-regulatory learning, which is an essential aspect of life-long learning for today’s National Health Service workforce. Using a small-scale case study of practice this paper considers the experiences of 25 learners who, as qualified health and social care practitioners studying a B.Sc. (Hons.) Public Health programme, used Blackboard to reflect online. Questionnaires, a focus group discussion and examination of online dialogue were used to collect data. Findings suggest that learners developed more extensive reflective accounts than they had done previously when reflecting in traditional classroom environments. They reflected further, spent longer reflecting, self-managed their reflective learning and recognised significant learning achievements through reflection. Data indicate varying levels of engagement in the online reflective process, with not all learners achieving a deep level of critical analysis. This paper considers the design and construction of the online learning activity and environment before discussing the findings of the evaluation and implications.
reflective learning, health and social care education, e-learning
167-176
Morgan, Jane
98f0c249-3550-453a-9b06-bd27e9622744
Rawlinson, Mark
b2a4526d-da8d-4bc6-b835-7fb3c6823ed1
Weaver, Mike
cf525e90-abe9-416c-9b2e-8ddc2f886d00
June 2006
Morgan, Jane
98f0c249-3550-453a-9b06-bd27e9622744
Rawlinson, Mark
b2a4526d-da8d-4bc6-b835-7fb3c6823ed1
Weaver, Mike
cf525e90-abe9-416c-9b2e-8ddc2f886d00
Morgan, Jane, Rawlinson, Mark and Weaver, Mike
(2006)
Facilitating online reflective learning for health and social care professionals.
Open Learning: The Journal of Open and Distance Learning, 21 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/02680510600715594).
Abstract
Health and social care education has a long established association with reflective learning as a way of developing post-qualifying professional practice. Reflective learning is also a key feature of self-regulatory learning, which is an essential aspect of life-long learning for today’s National Health Service workforce. Using a small-scale case study of practice this paper considers the experiences of 25 learners who, as qualified health and social care practitioners studying a B.Sc. (Hons.) Public Health programme, used Blackboard to reflect online. Questionnaires, a focus group discussion and examination of online dialogue were used to collect data. Findings suggest that learners developed more extensive reflective accounts than they had done previously when reflecting in traditional classroom environments. They reflected further, spent longer reflecting, self-managed their reflective learning and recognised significant learning achievements through reflection. Data indicate varying levels of engagement in the online reflective process, with not all learners achieving a deep level of critical analysis. This paper considers the design and construction of the online learning activity and environment before discussing the findings of the evaluation and implications.
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Published date: June 2006
Keywords:
reflective learning, health and social care education, e-learning
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Local EPrints ID: 42947
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/42947
ISSN: 0268-0513
PURE UUID: 487480f3-891b-4ea9-803b-f46da7ce7cd0
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Date deposited: 04 Jan 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:51
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Contributors
Author:
Jane Morgan
Author:
Mark Rawlinson
Author:
Mike Weaver
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