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Articles

Relative distancing: A grounded theory of how learners negotiate the interprofessional

Pages 34-42 | Received 21 Jan 2012, Accepted 08 Aug 2012, Published online: 07 Sep 2012
 

Abstract

A number of extant educational, psychological and sociological theories have been suggested as possessing utility for interprofessional education (IPE). However, there is limited theory proposed that has been derived directly from data. This article adds to the theoretical toolkit by theorizing from data using constructionist grounded theorizing. This article discusses the grounded theorizing of participants' approaches to IPE and describes the social process of relative distancing, a collection of strategies employed by participants to construct their own professional identities and negotiate their way through interprofessional interactions. The categories of relative distancing are conceptualized as (1) integrating the professional and the interprofessional; (2) constellating and maintaining distance; (3) tensioning and manipulating distance and (4) the dimensions of distance. The first, and most theoretically integrative, category will be discussed in detail here. It was found that participants valued certain learning outcomes over others. They favored learning opportunities that were perceived to be of direct relevance to their own professional development and contributed finite personal resources to these. Resources were committed to those interprofessional learning opportunities where relevance was perceived and the conditions of co-presence (with other professions) and a context for interaction were achieved. The discussion draws links between the data and contemporary discourses of economics and identity.

Acknowledgments

The author wishes to thank Dr Peter Martin, Professor Marilyn Hammick and Dr Mark Francis-Wright for critical feedback on an earlier version of the research presented in this article.

Declaration of interest The author reports no conflicts of interest. The author alone is responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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