Abstract:
Empowerment is a concept that has recently gained in popular usage and has been applied
to many situations including nursing practice. Current nursing practice includes the
expectation that registered nurses work with clients I patients and empower them so that they
may take an active part in their own health care. Current curricula for the education of nurses
in the USA, UK and New Zealand support this emancipatory intent. This study was conducted
at Whitireia Community Polytechnic where the curriculum for the bachelor of Nursing Degree
Programme is based on the Treaty of Waitangi and intends to empower students of nursing
so that they may in turn empower clients.
This research aimed to explore the phenomenon of empowerment from the perspective of
the student nurse. Using grounded theory methodology, and emancipatory, feminist and
action research philosophies, six year two student participants were interviewed and asked
to define the term empowerment and give exemplars (all were from practice based clinical
experience settings) of moments when they had been empowered in a teaching learning
context. Analysis of data led to the discovery of a theory and development of a theoretical
model describing conditions and consequences that led to empowerment. Analysis also
uncovered the conditions that led to disempowerment for the participant group.
Circumstances which enhanced empowerment included the attainment of year one
competencies and knowledge, preparation for practice and sufficient self efficacy to enter the
practice setting. The context or milieu influenced the process, and when the milieu provided
appropriate responsibility, orientation and positive interactions with a nurse expert (preceptor,
tutor or buddy) the student was enabled to engage in praxis. Praxis, followed by self
reflection allowed feelings of empowerment which in turn led to raised self efficacy and a
desire to engage in further practice experiences. If praxis was not possible a feeling of
disempowerment followed student self reflection. Disengagement was a consequence of
disempowerment if the intervention of assisted reflection did not occur. Assisted reflection
following disempowerment was found to be essential to maintain or strengthen self efficacy
to levels sufficient to allow further experiential learning.
The research process was found to be emancipatory for both the participants and the
researcher, and the theoretical model which was developed provided a descriptive cycle of
empowerment that was considered to be relevant to nursing education and other practice
based adult learning programmes. The value of this research was, that actors in the
empowering process could identify influential conditions which enhanced the development
of a greater sense of control over their learning in a manner that had the potential to result
in personal empowerment.
Major recommendations were: that adequate preparation in the Polytechnic setting, prior to
clinical placement should be maintained; that preceptorial programmes which include historic-sociocultural
and political content, are extended to all practice settings in which students gain
learning experience; that registered nurses in Polytechnic and practice settings be
encouraged to develop increased awareness of how their 'way of being' affects students; that
teachers who hold personal philosophical congruence with emancipatory curricula be
supported as educators, and; that processes that develop ongoing reflection be promoted in
nursing education and practice contexts. Further research to test the theory in other settings
was suggested.