Narrative Pedagogy: Heideggerian hermeneutical analyses of lived experiences of students, teachers, and clinicians

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Abstract

Research-based innovation in nursing education is needed to address complexities in both educational and clinical environments. This 12-year study describes Narrative Pedagogy that arises out of the common lived experiences of students, teachers, and clinicians in nursing education. Narrative Pedagogy as sharing and interpreting contemporary narratives is a call for students, teachers, and clinicians to gather and attend to community practices in ways that hold everything open and problematic. It utilizes conventional, phenomenologic, critical, and feminist pedagogies, along with postmodern discourses to revision nursing education. Narrative Pedagogy emanates out of interpretive phenomenology. The Concernful Practices of Schooling Learning Teaching are common experiences that belong together and co-occur and provide a new language for students and teachers. They will be explicated in the context of three narratives. Narrative Pedagogy is described as a research-based, innovative alternative for reforming nursing education.

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Diekelmann, N. (2001). Narrative Pedagogy: Heideggerian hermeneutical analyses of lived experiences of students, teachers, and clinicians. Advances in Nursing Science, 23(3), 53–71. https://doi.org/10.1097/00012272-200103000-00006

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