Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND REFUGE SERVICES IN AUSTRALIA:In Australia and internationally, domestic violence is a major cause of homelessness for women and children and yet provision for accommodation for this user-group is not well documented or understood. When designing emergency accommodation, the con...

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Main Authors: Samantha Donnelly, Suzanne Dean, Shohreh Razavy, Tracy Levett-Jones
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215795
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spelling doaj-21468dfdd421455d8378e9be9fe3cc422021-03-03T21:05:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011410e021579510.1371/journal.pone.0215795Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.Samantha DonnellySuzanne DeanShohreh RazavyTracy Levett-JonesDOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND REFUGE SERVICES IN AUSTRALIA:In Australia and internationally, domestic violence is a major cause of homelessness for women and children and yet provision for accommodation for this user-group is not well documented or understood. When designing emergency accommodation, the concerns, preferences, and perspectives of individuals who access refuge services must be sought in order to create spaces that are conducive to the needs of this diverse and vulnerable group. An empathic 'lens' can provide meaningful insights that can inform the design of refuge services specifically targeted at addressing these needs. This paper describes an authentic interdisciplinary learning experience for nursing, architecture and landscape students at a university in Sydney, Australia, and presents the results of a study designed to measure the impact of this initiative on participants' empathy towards women and children who access refuge services as a result of homelessness and/or domestic violence. Empathy levels were measured using the Comprehensive State Empathy Scale, a validated measurement tool. AN AUTHENTIC INTERDISCIPLINARY LEARNING EXPERIENCE:The learning experience consisted of collaborative meetings with stakeholders from the refuge sector, fieldwork, individual research, exchanging ideas and problem-solving in teams. Students then developed design guides for refuges that demonstrated their emerging understanding of the specific needs and perspectives of the issues faced by women and children who had experienced violence and found themselves homeless. Pre-post Comprehensive State Empathy Scale results indicated that the empathy levels of nursing and landscape students increased and those of architecture students decreased, however, these results were not statistically significant. BUILDING EMPATHY IN TEACHING AND LEARNING:The significance of the results from this study include an ability to compare the changes in empathy in students working collaboratively on a project and to ascertain possible reasons for this using a validated measurement tool. As empathy is one of the strongest negative correlates of prejudice, authentic teaching and learning activities, such as the one described in this paper, have the potential to positively impact the lived experience of women and children leaving situations of domestic violence.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215795
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samantha Donnelly
Suzanne Dean
Shohreh Razavy
Tracy Levett-Jones
spellingShingle Samantha Donnelly
Suzanne Dean
Shohreh Razavy
Tracy Levett-Jones
Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Samantha Donnelly
Suzanne Dean
Shohreh Razavy
Tracy Levett-Jones
author_sort Samantha Donnelly
title Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.
title_short Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.
title_full Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.
title_fullStr Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.
title_full_unstemmed Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.
title_sort measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary learning project on nursing, architecture and landscape design students' empathy.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND REFUGE SERVICES IN AUSTRALIA:In Australia and internationally, domestic violence is a major cause of homelessness for women and children and yet provision for accommodation for this user-group is not well documented or understood. When designing emergency accommodation, the concerns, preferences, and perspectives of individuals who access refuge services must be sought in order to create spaces that are conducive to the needs of this diverse and vulnerable group. An empathic 'lens' can provide meaningful insights that can inform the design of refuge services specifically targeted at addressing these needs. This paper describes an authentic interdisciplinary learning experience for nursing, architecture and landscape students at a university in Sydney, Australia, and presents the results of a study designed to measure the impact of this initiative on participants' empathy towards women and children who access refuge services as a result of homelessness and/or domestic violence. Empathy levels were measured using the Comprehensive State Empathy Scale, a validated measurement tool. AN AUTHENTIC INTERDISCIPLINARY LEARNING EXPERIENCE:The learning experience consisted of collaborative meetings with stakeholders from the refuge sector, fieldwork, individual research, exchanging ideas and problem-solving in teams. Students then developed design guides for refuges that demonstrated their emerging understanding of the specific needs and perspectives of the issues faced by women and children who had experienced violence and found themselves homeless. Pre-post Comprehensive State Empathy Scale results indicated that the empathy levels of nursing and landscape students increased and those of architecture students decreased, however, these results were not statistically significant. BUILDING EMPATHY IN TEACHING AND LEARNING:The significance of the results from this study include an ability to compare the changes in empathy in students working collaboratively on a project and to ascertain possible reasons for this using a validated measurement tool. As empathy is one of the strongest negative correlates of prejudice, authentic teaching and learning activities, such as the one described in this paper, have the potential to positively impact the lived experience of women and children leaving situations of domestic violence.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215795
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