The client as educator: learning about mental illness through the eyes of the expert.

Nurse Educ Today

Memorial University of Newfoundland, School of Nursing, St. John's, NF, Canada A1B 3V6.

Published: February 2003

Increasingly, educators are asking clients who have a mental illness to make a contribution to nursing students' learning as a way of informing their attitudes towards persons experiencing mental illness and thus enhancing care delivery. The nature of clients' involvement in the classroom and the quality of learning by students through this approach has rarely been questioned. This paper discusses a model of client/nurse educator collaboration in a mental health course with undergraduate nursing students. It draws on the nursing education experiences of the first author, and the personal views of the second author, a user of mental health services. Specifically, it addresses positive features of collaboration as perceived by students, client, and nurse educator and analyzes some of the challenges/issues for the nurse educator. In addition, it outlines helpful aspects of the collaborative process for both nurse educator and client, in particular, its impact on the client's personal well being. This kind of analysis is essential if we are to develop education models of such collaboration that are beneficial for all partners in the learning process.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0260-6917(02)00193-4DOI Listing

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