The first experience of clinical practice on psychology students' imaginary

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Abstract

Considering the academic development of the psychologist as a complex process which articulates the transmission of scientific knowledge and changes in imaginative activity, we psychoanalytically investigate the collective imaginary of Psychology students regarding the first clinical consultation. We conducted a group interview with 52 undergraduate students, using the Thematic Story-Drawing Procedure as a way to open a dialogical field. The material obtained, through the psychoanalytical method, resulted in the creation/gathering of four affective-emotional meaning fields: "I came, I saw and I conquered", "I know that I (do not) know", "I survived and I will save" and "I am and I do", from which we see an emotionally immature imaginary about the meeting with the patient, since students are more self-centered than concerned with the patient. The overall situation indicates the need for care regarding student academic development, in order to encourage a more mature approach toward the suffering of the other.

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Gallo-Belluzzo, S. R., Corbett, E., & Aiello-Vaisberg, T. M. J. (2013). The first experience of clinical practice on psychology students’ imaginary. Paideia, 23(56), 389–396. https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-43272356201313

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