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Editorial November 2011

机译:社论2011年11月

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It seems to me that practice development doesn’t easily sit within healthcare provider organisations or within universities either. It’s what I call an ‘in-betweener’ or in some cases, the ‘unwelcome guest at the table’. Now....., if this table were a tea table then we could easily enough be gazing on a mad tea party courtesy of ‘Alice's Adventures in Wonderland’ (Carroll, 1865): ‘The distinguishing features of this tea party is that there is always a tea party going on (a meeting of some sorts), time is either stuck or running out. At the party the participants switch places on the table at any given time (frequent changing of roles), making personal remarks about other people, ask unanswerable riddles (practice challenges) and recite nonsensical poetry (evidence). All of which eventually drive Alice away. The Hatter of course, is adept at changing his guise and reappearing elsewhere and getting through by his whiskers. Finally, we shouldn’t forget the sleeping dormouse who sleeps for most of the tea party’ This may (or hopefully may not) sound like a work place near you. So why is practice development an uncomfortable guest? To begin with practice developers tend to influence what goes on around the table. Looking at how we talk to each other and how we act is a fundamental representation of our values. This is one recurring part of the daily work of many practice developers. More broadly, both organisations present the practice developer with riddles. Question: What does the University have in common with the healthcare provider when the former demands end point outputs generalisable to national and international contexts and the latter to localised and particular contexts? To be a practice developer means having to accommodate the needs of diverse guests or stakeholders, who often, on the surface of it, have competing needs. The irony is that practice development can contribute significantly to both academic and provider organisational targets and needs. However, both organisations seem to have vested interests in being different to each other. It is this space of ‘difference’ or diversity and multiple needs that practice development and the effective practice developer learn how to dwell in. The first challenge for the practice developer is to learn how to sit on an uncomfortable seat – to be perched on a critical edge at the table. However, a tension emerges for the practice developer here. Everyone working in an organisation wants to feel comfortable – in some ways to feel at home. For the practice developer this is not possible and may even become a problem should it happen. Most practice developers need to be inside the organisation for things about it (the workplace cultures) to become familiar and yet, things need to stand out as ‘not familiar’ in order that we are curious about them and want to explore them. This can range from routines and rituals, language and discourse, trolleys being used for certain procedures, gloves that are worn for almost every procedure they aren’t indicated for, and those home-made signs and pieces of documentation that keep reappearing. Being familiar and comfortable is probably essential for our own safety and security as well as enabling us to thrive and ultimately flourish in the workplace as a person. However, if we are too familiar it may follow that we become too comfortable and therefore less effective in our work and development of our personhood. Perching on the edge and living with the tensions that exist between familiarity and unfamiliarity, being at home and being in a strange place can be emotionally demanding work. Those of us more experienced in practice development need to support novice practice developers through this process so that they feel comfortable in their own skin even if not that comfortable at the table and the tea party. ‘Only a creature that knows how to dwell can paint, dance, think and write.’ Jager (2001, p 134) The first challenge is probably around how we learn to dwell within a work place to become familiar with it, and yet retain and then enhance a capacity for the unfamiliar as this will feed our creativity. In this issue we can see some of the ways in which practice developers are reaping the rewards of the different types of dwelling they are engaging with. We have a wide range of papers and reflective pieces covering different aspects of dwelling and other dimensions of practice development. We are also introducing a new feature; our novice or first time writer publication. For this issue this is Helen Hunnisett, a Senior Physiotherapist working in the NHS and a novice practice developer. Thank you to all the authors, reviewers and commentators for your contributions to this issue and the first issue. We are coming to the end of our first year and turning our gaze towards 2012. I hope you enjoy this issue of the journal and find it useful for your work. Please let other people know about the journal and let us know if you’v
机译:在我看来,实践发展既不容易出现在医疗服务提供者组织内,也不容易出现在大学内。这就是我所说的“中间人”,或者在某些情况下,是“餐桌上的不受欢迎的客人”。现在...,如果这张桌子是茶几,那么我们很容易就能凝视着一个疯狂的茶会,这是由“爱丽丝梦游仙境”(Carroll,1865年)提供的:“这个茶会的显着特征是总会有一场茶话会(某种形式的会议),时间不多或用完了。在聚会上,参与者可以在任何给定时间切换桌子上的位置(频繁更换角色),对其他人发表个人评论,提出难以置信的谜语(练习挑战)并背诵荒谬的诗歌(证据)。所有这些最终将爱丽丝赶走了。当然,帽商擅长于改变自己的外表,在其他地方重现,并被胡须击穿。最后,我们不要忘记在大多数茶话会上睡觉的睡觉的睡房。”这听起来可能(或希望不会)听起来像您附近的工作场所。那么,为什么实践发展会令客人感到不舒服?首先,开发人员倾向于影响桌子周围的情况。看我们如何互相交谈以及我们如何行动是我们价值观的基本代表。这是许多实践开发人员日常工作的一部分。从更广泛的角度来看,这两个组织都给实践开发人员带来了困惑。问题:当前者要求端点输出可推广到国内和国际情况,而后者则可扩展到本地和特定情况时,大学与医疗提供者有什么共同点?成为一名实践开发人员意味着必须适应多样化的来宾或利益相关者的需求,而这些来访者或利益相关者通常在表面上都具有相互竞争的需求。具有讽刺意味的是,实践开发可以为学术和提供者的组织目标和需求做出重大贡献。但是,两个组织似乎在彼此不同方面具有既得利益。练习开发正是这种“差异”或多样性以及多重需求的空间,有效的练习开发者才能学习到如何生活。练习开发者的第一个挑战是学习如何坐在不舒服的座位上,如何坐在座位上。桌上的关键边缘。但是,这里的实践开发人员出现了压力。在组织中工作的每个人都希望以某种方式感到自在—感到宾至如归。对于实践开发人员来说,这是不可能的,甚至可能会成为问题。大多数实践开发人员都需要进入组织内部才能使有关它的事物(工作场所文化)变得熟悉,但是,为了使我们对它们感到好奇并希望对其进行探索,需要使事物变得“不熟悉”。范围可能从例行程序和仪式,语言和话语,用于某些程序的手推车,几乎没有指示出的每个程序都戴上手套,以及不断出现的那些自制标志和文件。熟悉和舒适对我们自己的安全和保障以及使我们在一个人的职场中蓬勃发展并最终蓬勃发展至关重要。但是,如果我们太熟悉了,那么我们可能会变得太自在,因此在工作和人格发展中效率降低。栖息在边缘并忍受在熟悉与陌生之间存在的紧张关系,在家中或在陌生的地方可能是需要情感的工作。我们中那些在实践开发方面更有经验的人需要通过此过程来支持新手实践开发者,以使他们在自己的皮肤上感到舒适,即使在餐桌和茶会上也不那么舒服。 “只有一个知道如何居住的生物才能绘画,跳舞,思考和书写。” Jager(2001,p 134)第一个挑战可能是我们如何学会居住在工作场所以熟悉并保持住它。然后增强陌生人的能力,因为这会养活我们的创造力。在本期中,我们可以看到实践开发人员从与他们合作的不同类型房屋中获得收益的一些方式。我们提供广泛的论文和反光片,涵盖住宅的不同方面以及实践开发的其他方面。我们还引入了一项新功能;我们的新手或首次作家出版物。对于这个问题,这是NHS中的高级物理治疗师,新手实践开发人员Helen Hunnisett。感谢所有作者,评论者和评论者对本期和第一期的贡献。第一年即将结束,我们将目光转向2012年。我希望您喜欢本期杂志,并发现它对您的工作很有用。请让其他人知道该杂志,并让我们知道您是否

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