Working with actors in open disclosure simulations
Contribuinte(s) |
Iedema, Rick |
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Data(s) |
04/10/2012
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Resumo |
A key strategy in facilitating learning in Open Disclosure training is the use of hypothetical, interactive scenarios called ‘simulations’. According to Clapper (2010), the ‘advantages of using simulation are numerous and include the ability to help learners make meaning of complex tasks, while also developing critical thinking and cultural skills’. Simulation, in turn, functions largely through improvisation and role-play, in which participants ‘act out’ particular roles and characters according to a given scenario, without recourse to a script. To maximise efficacy in the Open Disclosure training context, role-play requires the specialist skills of professionally trained actors. Core capacities that professional actors bring to the training process include (among others) believability, an observable and teachable skill which underpins the western traditions of actor training; and flexibility, which pertains to the actor’s ability to vary performance strategies according to the changing dynamics of the learning situation. The Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Service of Queensland Health utilises professional actors as a key component of their Open Disclosure Training Program. In engaging actors in this work, it is essential that Facilitators of Open Disclosure training have a solid understanding of the acting process: what acting is; how actors work to a brief; how they improvise; and how they sustainably manage a wide range of emotional states. In the simulation context, the highly skilled actor can optimise learning outcomes by adopting or enacting – in collaboration with the Facilitator - a pedagogical function. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
University of Technology Sydney |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/55473/2/55473.pdf http://www.centreforhealthcom.org/incidentdisclosure2012 Makeham, Paul B. & Radvan, Mark (2012) Working with actors in open disclosure simulations. In Iedema, Rick (Ed.) 1st International Incident Disclosure Conference, University of Technology Sydney, University of Technology Sydney. |
Direitos |
Copyright 2012 UTS: Centre for Health Communication and the authors. |
Fonte |
Drama; Creative Industries Faculty |
Palavras-Chave | #190000 STUDIES IN CREATIVE ARTS AND WRITING #Open Disclosure #Simulations #Actors |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |