Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of Ireland

Purpose - Role-emerging placements have been used internationally within occupational therapy education but are relatively new to Ireland. At times, there has been a debate in the profession regarding the use of this placement model. This paper aims to generate views from both occupational therapist...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Esther Linnane, Alison Warren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Emerald Publishing 2017-05-01
Series:Irish Journal of Occupational Therapy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/IJOT-01-2017-0002
id doaj-a672f73d7c2746c0b95bbf21d042f8fe
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a672f73d7c2746c0b95bbf21d042f8fe2020-11-24T21:11:19ZengEmerald PublishingIrish Journal of Occupational Therapy0791-84372398-88192017-05-01451405110.1108/IJOT-01-2017-0002591929Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of IrelandEsther Linnane0Alison Warren1University of Limerick, Limerick, IrelandSchool of Health Professions, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UKPurpose - Role-emerging placements have been used internationally within occupational therapy education but are relatively new to Ireland. At times, there has been a debate in the profession regarding the use of this placement model. This paper aims to generate views from both occupational therapists and occupational therapy students on the use of role-emerging placements in the Republic of Ireland. Design/methodology/approach - Electronic surveys were administered to occupational therapy students and occupational therapists in Ireland. Quantitative data were analysed using the SPSS Statistics software package and the content of the open question responses were analysed into themes. Findings - Occupational therapists (n = 60) and occupational therapy students (n = 45) indicated that there were inconsistent views surrounding role-emerging placements. It is deemed as an effective method for student learning, but apprehension exists around inclusion within occupational therapy programmes in the Republic of Ireland. Preference was indicated towards inclusion of role-emerging placements on a part-time basis within formal occupational therapy education. Originality/value - Both respondent groups viewed that role-emerging placements can positively influence new areas of occupational therapy practice and concern over the use of the placement model requires further exploration and debate. This study is from an Irish context, although there are similarities with other countries’ use of the placement model. There is a need for research through an in-depth exploration of the learning experience of undertaking role-emerging placements from the students’ perspective and identification of supports required to promote an optimal learning experience.https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/IJOT-01-2017-0002Occupational therapyEducation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Esther Linnane
Alison Warren
spellingShingle Esther Linnane
Alison Warren
Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of Ireland
Irish Journal of Occupational Therapy
Occupational therapy
Education
author_facet Esther Linnane
Alison Warren
author_sort Esther Linnane
title Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of Ireland
title_short Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of Ireland
title_full Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of Ireland
title_fullStr Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of Ireland
title_full_unstemmed Apprehension and interest: Therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the Republic of Ireland
title_sort apprehension and interest: therapist and student views of the role emerging placement model in the republic of ireland
publisher Emerald Publishing
series Irish Journal of Occupational Therapy
issn 0791-8437
2398-8819
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Purpose - Role-emerging placements have been used internationally within occupational therapy education but are relatively new to Ireland. At times, there has been a debate in the profession regarding the use of this placement model. This paper aims to generate views from both occupational therapists and occupational therapy students on the use of role-emerging placements in the Republic of Ireland. Design/methodology/approach - Electronic surveys were administered to occupational therapy students and occupational therapists in Ireland. Quantitative data were analysed using the SPSS Statistics software package and the content of the open question responses were analysed into themes. Findings - Occupational therapists (n = 60) and occupational therapy students (n = 45) indicated that there were inconsistent views surrounding role-emerging placements. It is deemed as an effective method for student learning, but apprehension exists around inclusion within occupational therapy programmes in the Republic of Ireland. Preference was indicated towards inclusion of role-emerging placements on a part-time basis within formal occupational therapy education. Originality/value - Both respondent groups viewed that role-emerging placements can positively influence new areas of occupational therapy practice and concern over the use of the placement model requires further exploration and debate. This study is from an Irish context, although there are similarities with other countries’ use of the placement model. There is a need for research through an in-depth exploration of the learning experience of undertaking role-emerging placements from the students’ perspective and identification of supports required to promote an optimal learning experience.
topic Occupational therapy
Education
url https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/IJOT-01-2017-0002
work_keys_str_mv AT estherlinnane apprehensionandinteresttherapistandstudentviewsoftheroleemergingplacementmodelintherepublicofireland
AT alisonwarren apprehensionandinteresttherapistandstudentviewsoftheroleemergingplacementmodelintherepublicofireland
_version_ 1716753846179463168