OBJECTIVES: To promote community participation in exploring perceptions of psychological distress amongst Pakistani and Bangladeshi people, in order to develop appropriate services. DESIGN: Training and facilitation of resident community members (as community project workers), to define and conduct qualitative research involving semistructured interviews in their own communities, informing primary care led commissioning and service decision making. Setting A socio-economically disadvantaged inner-city locality in the UK. Participants One-hundred and four South Asian people (49 of Pakistani and 55 of Bangladeshi origin), interviewed by 13 resident community members. RESULTS: All community project workers completed training leading to a National Vocational Qualification, and successfully executed the research. Most study respondents located their main sources of stress within pervasive experience of racism and socio-economic disadvantage. They were positive about 'talking' and neutral listening as helpful, but sought strategies beyond non-directive counselling services that embraced practical welfare advice and social support. The roles of primary health care professionals were believed to be restricted to physical ill health rather than personal distress. The importance of professionals' sex, age, ethnicity and social status were emphasized as affecting open communication. Practical recommendations for the re-orientation and provision of services were generated and implemented in response to the findings, through dialogue with a primary care commissioning group, Health and Local Authority, and voluntary agencies. CONCLUSIONS: The work illustrates the feasibility and value of a community participation approach to research and service development in addressing a challenging and neglected area of minority ethnic health need. It offers one model for generating responsive service change in the context of current health policy in the UK, whilst also imparting skills and empowering community members. The study findings emphasize the need to recognize the social contexts in which distress is experienced and have implications for effective responses.
This article explores the student experience of simulated learning in post-compulsory radiography education. The content is based on the varied experiences of students using both laboratory-based simulation exercises and a virtual reality computer simulation activity by situating these views within a wider understanding of the students' journey through their undergraduate and postgraduate studies. Much research on the application of technology in pedagogy in post-compulsory education has sought to find ways of measuring the efficacy of such interventions in raising student achievement. This research reveals a diverse range of student experiences in learning with technology. There are potential pedagogical benefits with computer simulation in radiography education; however the research reveals the need for educators and policy-makers to recognise the sheer complexity of radiography practice and the importance of evaluating simulation within a holistic view of the curriculum. The data was gathered via four focus group discussions; one research interview; and reflections that were made about simulated learning within research diaries. The article contributes to new knowledge about the use of simulated learning in post-compulsory medical education.
The discussion of the subject "Should Teachers do Research Work or Commercial Work" quite naturally divides itself into two divisions. First, should teachers be research men actually engaged in the work? And second, should teachers be allowed to practice the profession while teaching?Teachers, research men, and executives should be selected for the respective places according to their ability, teachers to lead the student in an enthusiastic path of study, research men to solve the mystery of the research problems, and executives to guide the organization through troubled waters.A teacher is not necessarily a good research man and a good research man does not generally make a good teacher. The mind required 1 Holmyard, "The Historical Method in the Teaching of Chemistry," School Science Review, 5, 227 (1924).
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