The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective

Assigning a fail grade, particularly when it results in the termination of a career goal, is a taboo and taken-for-granted aspect of an assessor's role. Hermeneutics provided the main framework for interpreting the subjective and objective experiences of both academic and fieldwork supervisors...

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Main Author: Ilott, Irene
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13461/
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author Ilott, Irene
author_facet Ilott, Irene
author_sort Ilott, Irene
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Assigning a fail grade, particularly when it results in the termination of a career goal, is a taboo and taken-for-granted aspect of an assessor's role. Hermeneutics provided the main framework for interpreting the subjective and objective experiences of both academic and fieldwork supervisors during this process. An incremental research design, using a principal and two supplementary methods was used to investigate the minutiae of assessing whether a student has achieved the required standard of competence. Focused interviews were conducted with 25 academic and 5 fieldwork supervisors to compare the perspective of staff with different roles, relationships and responsibilities. These were preceded by two questionnaire surveys with trained, experienced fieldwork supervisors. On the first survey 64% (n=72) ranked 'failing a student' as their most problematical responsibility. The second survey comprised immediate and follow-up evaluations of five 'failure workshops' attended by 101 supervisors. They highlighted the importance of an assessor's affective response, reinforced effective supervisory strategies and the professional obligation to act as a gatekeeper of future standards. The results revealed a diverse array of individual factors, institutional rituals and external pressures which seemed to facilitate or sabotage the quality of the process and outcome. These included an assessor's inexperience, the conflict in values and roles between therapist and educator; characteristics of the student particularly the pastoral relationship and stage of training; the valued impartiality of an external examiner or fieldwork organiser; and the threat to reputations and course viability if results provide the primary performance indicator. An understanding of the complex constellation of factors which may influence an assessor's ability and confidence to fairly judge both initial and ongoing competence is important for all 'caring' professions to ensure only safe practitioners are registered to work with vulnerable clients.
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spelling nottingham-134612025-02-28T11:25:20Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13461/ The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective Ilott, Irene Assigning a fail grade, particularly when it results in the termination of a career goal, is a taboo and taken-for-granted aspect of an assessor's role. Hermeneutics provided the main framework for interpreting the subjective and objective experiences of both academic and fieldwork supervisors during this process. An incremental research design, using a principal and two supplementary methods was used to investigate the minutiae of assessing whether a student has achieved the required standard of competence. Focused interviews were conducted with 25 academic and 5 fieldwork supervisors to compare the perspective of staff with different roles, relationships and responsibilities. These were preceded by two questionnaire surveys with trained, experienced fieldwork supervisors. On the first survey 64% (n=72) ranked 'failing a student' as their most problematical responsibility. The second survey comprised immediate and follow-up evaluations of five 'failure workshops' attended by 101 supervisors. They highlighted the importance of an assessor's affective response, reinforced effective supervisory strategies and the professional obligation to act as a gatekeeper of future standards. The results revealed a diverse array of individual factors, institutional rituals and external pressures which seemed to facilitate or sabotage the quality of the process and outcome. These included an assessor's inexperience, the conflict in values and roles between therapist and educator; characteristics of the student particularly the pastoral relationship and stage of training; the valued impartiality of an external examiner or fieldwork organiser; and the threat to reputations and course viability if results provide the primary performance indicator. An understanding of the complex constellation of factors which may influence an assessor's ability and confidence to fairly judge both initial and ongoing competence is important for all 'caring' professions to ensure only safe practitioners are registered to work with vulnerable clients. 1993 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13461/1/357018.pdf Ilott, Irene (1993) The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Assessment of students Role of supervisors Competance Standards in occupational therapy
spellingShingle Assessment of students
Role of supervisors
Competance
Standards in occupational therapy
Ilott, Irene
The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective
title The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective
title_full The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective
title_fullStr The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective
title_full_unstemmed The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective
title_short The process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective
title_sort process of failing occupational therapy students: a staff perspective
topic Assessment of students
Role of supervisors
Competance
Standards in occupational therapy
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13461/