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Carper (1978) Fundamental patterns of knowing. Knowledge development for a practice discipline. The problem of Nursing as a practice discipline. Nursing involves processes of dynamic interactions Nurses in practice know more than they can communicate to others
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Carper (1978) Fundamental patterns of knowing Knowledge development for a practice discipline
The problem of Nursing as a practice discipline • Nursing involves processes of dynamic interactions • Nurses in practice know more than they can communicate to others • Historically what nurses know has not been communicated well • Empirical knowledge only partially reflects nursing knowledge • This can be improved when all forms of knowing are integrated and valued
Why develop patterns of knowing • The aim of Carper’s theory was to: • Formally express nursing knowledge • Provide a professional and discipline identity • Convey to others what nursing contributes to healthcare • Create expert and effective nursing practice
Knowing and knowledge • Knowing and knowledge • Knowing refers to the way of perceiving and understanding self and the world • Knowledge refers to knowing that is expressed in a form that can be shared and communicated to others
Nursing’s fundamental patterns of knowing • Carper (1978) • Ethics • Personal knowing • Aesthetics • Empirics • Chinn and Kramer (2008) • Emancipatory Knowing • The praxis of nursing
Ethics: the component of moral knowledge in nursing • Guides and directs how nurses conduct their practice • Requires • Experiential knowledge of social values • Ethical reasoning • Focus is on: • Matters of obligation, what ought to be done • Right , wrong and responsibility • Ethical codes of nursing • Confronting and resolving conflicting values, norms, interests or principles
Sources of Ethical knowing • Nursing’s ethical codes and professional standards • An understanding of different philosophical positions • Consequentialism • Deontology • Duty • Social justice
Personal knowing:acceptance of self that is grounded in self-knowledge and confidence • Concerned with becoming self-aware • Self–awareness that grows over time through interactions with others • Used when nurses engage in the therapeutic use of self in practice • Scientific competence, moral/ethical practice, insight and experience of personal knowing • Personal reflection • Informed by the response of others • Openness to experience
Personal knowing • Personal knowing needs to be integrated or reconciled with professional responsibilities • Personal Knowing is the basis of the therapeutic use of self in the nurse patient relationship • Perceiving self feelings, and prejudices within the situation
Aesthetic knowing: the art of nursing • Expressed through: • Actions, bearing, conduct, attitudes, narrative and interaction • Knowing what to do without conscious deliberation • Involves: • Deep appreciation of the meaning of a situation • Moves beyond the surface of a situation • Often shared without conscious exchange of words • Transformative art/acts • Brings together all the elements of a nursing care situation to create a meaningful whole
Aesthetic knowing • Perceiving the nature of a clinical situation and interpreting this information • To respond with skilled action • It uses the nurses intuition and empathy • Is based on the skill of the nurse in a given situation
Empirics: the science of nursing • Based on the assumption that what is known is accessible through the physical senses: seeing, touching and hearing. • Reality exists and truths about it can be understood • A pattern of knowing that draws on traditional ideas of science • Expressed in practice as scientific competence • Competent action grounded in scientific knowledge including theories and formal description • Involves conscious problem solving and logical reasoning • Nursing theory
Empirical knowing • Positivist science • Knowledge is systematically organised into general laws and theories • Source of this knowledge • Research • Theory
Emancipatory knowing (Chinn and Kramer) • Emancipatory knowing addresses the social and political context of nursing and healthcare and critiques the four fundamental patterns of knowing • It recognises serious social barriers to health and well-being • Emancipatory knowing requires an understanding of the nature of knowledge • Praxis is the process of emancipatory knowing. It requires both critical reflection and action
Fundamental patterns of knowing Empiric Emancipatory Ethical Personal Aesthetic
Methods of turning knowing into knowledge • Problem based learning • An instructional method in which students work in small groups • Used to gain knowledge and acquire problem-solving skills. • Clinical Supervision • An exchange between practicing professionals to enable the development of professional knowledge and skills • Structured reflection on practice • John’s (1994) model of structured reflection used Carper’s fundamental patterns of knowing • Section 5 of the model considers learning gained from the experience. It asks “how has this experience changed my ways of knowing?” • Empirics/ Aesthetics/Ethics/Personal