McDonald, Julie Ann (2012) Moving in a narrative space: dental practitioners developing professionally in and out of ICT. Ed.D thesis, University of Glasgow.
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Abstract
This narrative inquiry grew from my concerns that the
voices of dental practitioners were going unheard in
movements to reform professional development, in
particular through information and communication
technology (ICT). Recently, professional development
policy has been driven by calls for a greater use of
ICT for education, healthcare and professional
development. However, from casual conversations in my
own practice and with colleagues, I noted tensions
that raised questions on the rationale underpinning
many of the changes taking place. I began to ask what
we might understand by professional development, and
how we might seek it through ICT. In turning to
literature on professional development, dentistry was
a relatively unexplored area. In addition, little was
known about the actual experiences of those seeking
professional development. My concerns and questions,
combined with this lack of research in the field of
dental professional development and the use of ICT,
suggested the need to explore the experiences of
dental practitioners undertaking professional
development and to consider their views on ICT.
My assumption is that experiences are embedded in
everyday conversations and exchanges as the stories we
tell each other. To be able to understand those
experiences, I felt a need to access those
conversations and exchanges. This meant going further
than collecting data from tick boxes at the end of
course evaluation sheets. Taking a narrative approach
and using qualitative interviews, I collected the
stories of nine dental professionals. In the
conversations that took place, the participants and I
explored and reflected on our own practice,
professional development and ICT. Using a performative
analysis (Riessman 2008), I reconstructed the stories
through Davies and Harré’s (1999) metaphor of an
‘unfolding narrative’ (p.42), taking stories as an
emergent process through interaction with different
social and cultural representations.
While the focus at the start of this study was on ICT,
it rapidly became clear that the participants did not
regard ICT as a central part of being a practitioner
and indeed a professional. Accordingly, the study
became one of exploring being a practitioner and a
professional, and the influences of recent
organisational and institutional changes and ICT moved
from a central to a peripheral focus. From the
resultant stories, I found three performances
dominated in which practitioners developed ways of
“being”, “instincts”, as I named them which emerged in
response to a negotiation with policy, practice and
paths of development. I identified those instincts
emerging from a “professional self” constructed from
policy through fixed predetermined paths. This
contrasted with a “practitioner self” which drew from
intuition, craft-like practices, and paths of
development which were largely undetermined. I
identified shifting positions and subjectivities as
practitioners reflected on their values for practice
and professional development. From those reflections,
there was a questioning of the professional role, the
way the dental professional might be represented, the
way the practitioner self might develop and the way
they might position themselves, in particular in
expanded spaces for professional development through
ICT.
In order to interpret the resultant performances
within both global and micro-contexts, I viewed them
through a critical lens, interrogating the
sociocultural and political environment. I found that
representations of the professional role suggested a
challenge for education, self-determination and
development. As a result, I saw those participants
sitting in a “liminal space”; a junction of
sociocultural influences framed by policy,
professional life, practice and ICT. This liminal
space yielded a multitude of challenges, negotiations
and possibilities as the ‘inevitable consequences of
certain economic, social and political processes’
(Brookfield 1995, p.36). In conclusion, in the face
of those framings and education, I propose a need for
a “professional literacy” and a new professional
narrative that considers the capabilities and
possibilities for dialogue and, in the light of our
practice and advancing technology, would take account
of expanded and undetermined paths of professional
development.
Item Type: | Thesis (Ed.D) |
---|---|
Qualification Level: | Doctoral |
Keywords: | professional development, ICT, narrative, identity |
Subjects: | L Education > L Education (General) |
Colleges/Schools: | College of Social Sciences > School of Education |
Supervisor's Name: | Hedge, Dr Nicki |
Date of Award: | 2012 |
Depositing User: | Julie A McDonald |
Unique ID: | glathesis:2012-3632 |
Copyright: | Copyright of this thesis is held by the author. |
Date Deposited: | 05 Oct 2012 |
Last Modified: | 10 Dec 2012 14:09 |
URI: | https://theses.gla.ac.uk/id/eprint/3632 |
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