The practice educator as museum guide, art therapist or exhibition curator
Author(s) -
Wendy Couchman,
Trish HaffordLetchfield,
Kate Leonard
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the journal of practice teaching in health and social work
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1746-6113
pISSN - 1460-6690
DOI - 10.1921/8302120306
Subject(s) - exhibition , visual arts , psychology , art , psychotherapist , medical education , medicine
The use of arts-based approaches in professional education in health and social care has gathered momentum in the last decade and their effectiveness has been well documented. There are helpful models in the education literature that begin to explain how these creative methods work in learning and practice, and that assert the significance of an emotional or affective level of learning. However, the process remains elusive, almost a 'given'. A more cross-disciplinary analysis of affective learning is needed to guide arts-based methods and more robust evaluation of their use in health and social care education and practice. This paper identifies different roles that can be taken by the practice educator with a review of those theoretical models of affective learning that underpin them to help understand how and why arts-based approaches are effective.
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