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Document Type (Journals)

Original Research

Abstract

Occupational therapy education standards for teaching occupation are inconsistently applied and there is a lack of evidence to inform teaching practice in Australia. This qualitative study explored what teaching methods and approaches Australian occupational therapy educators used in their classroom, and why those methods were used. The research was completed in two phases: narrative inquiry guided Phase I where educators were interviewed about the methods and approaches used to teach occupation. In Phase II video-reflexive ethnography was implemented, where a video recording of teaching was used as a prompt for a reflexive discussion about the educator’s teaching approaches. The interviews and discussions were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using thematic analysis. Thirteen educators participated who had an average of two decades experience as an occupational therapist and one decade as a university educator. Five themes explained the methods and approaches used to teach occupation: i) foregrounding occupation, ii) making occupation personal, iii) making occupation explicit, iv) being a guide: guiding rather than prescribing, and v) drawing on my inner occupational therapist. Recommendations for education practice include foregrounding occupation through repetition, reinforcement, and making overt connections to the concept in each learning encounter. Educators could also use intentional and deliberate strategies such as students exploring occupation from their own perspectives and through involvement in participatory community projects. Further research could gather additional perspectives from students and from teaching teams to better understand, interpret, and illuminate how occupation is taught in a course or program and in participatory community projects.

Biography

Melanie Roberts, PhD, MClinRehab, BAppSc(Occ.Thy) is a Researcher at Griffith University and at Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service. Dr Roberts has worked in a variety of practice contexts as an Occupational Therapist for over 15 years and as an academic for 11 years.

Barbara Hooper, PhD, OTR, FAOTA is the Founding Program Director and Division Chief for the Occupational Therapy Doctorate Division at Duke University School of Medicine.

Bernadette Sebar, PhD is the Discipline Lead and Program Director of Public Health at Griffith University.

Jim Woodburn, PhD, FRCP Edin, FFPM RCPS(Glasg) is the Head of School of the School of Health Sciences and Social Work at Griffith University.

Declaration of Interest

The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.

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