Understanding partnership practice in primary health as pedagogic work: what can Vygotsky’s theory of learning offer?
Nick HopwoodUniversity of Technology, PO Box 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia. Email: nick.hopwood@uts.edu.au
Australian Journal of Primary Health 21(1) 9-13 https://doi.org/10.1071/PY12141
Submitted: 25 October 2012 Accepted: 16 October 2013 Published: 12 November 2013
Abstract
Primary health policy in Australia has followed international trends in promoting models of care based on partnership between professionals and health service users. This reform agenda has significant practice implications, and has been widely adopted in areas of primary health that involve supporting families with children. Existing research shows that achieving partnership in practice is associated with three specific challenges: uncertainty regarding the role of professional expertise, tension between immediate needs and longer-term capacity development in families, and the need for challenge while maintaining relationships based on trust. Recently, pedagogic or learning-focussed elements of partnership practice have been identified, but there have been no systematic attempts to link theories of learning with the practices and challenges of primary health-care professionals working with families in a pedagogic role. This paper explores key concepts of Vygotsky’s theory of learning (including mediation, the zone of proximal development, internalisation, and double stimulation), showing how pedagogic concepts can provide a bridge between the policy rhetoric of partnership and primary health practice. The use of this theory to address the three key challenges is explicitly discussed.
References
Arney F, Scott F (Eds) (2010) ‘Book Working with vulnerable families: a partnership approach.’ (Cambridge University Press: Melbourne)Bidmead C, Davis H (2008) Partnership working: the key to public health. In ‘Community public health in policy and practice.’ (Ed. S Cowley) pp. 28–48. (Elsevier: Edinburgh)
Bowlby J (1988) ‘A secure base: clinical application of attachment theory.’ (Routledge: London)
Centre for Community Child Health (2007) ‘Effective community-based services: policy brief no. 6.’ (The Royal Children’s Hospital: Melbourne)
Children, Youth and Families Division (2010) ‘Supporting parents, supporting children: a Victorian early parenting strategy.’ (Victorian Government Department of Human Services: Melbourne)
Davis H, Day C (2010) ‘Working in partnership: the family partnership model.’ (Pearson: London)
Davis H, Fallowfield L (1991) ‘Counselling and communication in health care.’ (Wiley: London)
Dunston R, Lee A, Boud D, Brodie P, Chiarella M (2009) Co-production and health system reform - from re-imagining to re-making. The Australian Journal of Public Administration 68, 39–52.
| Co-production and health system reform - from re-imagining to re-making.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Edwards A, Daniels H, Gallagher T, Leadbetter J, Warmington P (2009) ‘Improving inter-professional collaborations: multi-agency working for children’s wellbeing.’ (Routledge: London)
Fowler C, Lee A (2007) Knowing how to know: questioning ‘knowledge transfer’ as a model for knowing and learning in health. Studies in Continuing Education 29, 181–193.
| Knowing how to know: questioning ‘knowledge transfer’ as a model for knowing and learning in health.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Fowler C, Dunston R, Lee A, Rossiter C, McKenzie J (2011) Reciprocal learning in partnership practice: an exploratory study of a home visiting program for mothers with depression. Studies in Continuing Education 34, 99–112.
| Reciprocal learning in partnership practice: an exploratory study of a home visiting program for mothers with depression.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Fowler C, Lee A, Dunston R, Chiarella M, Rossiter C (2012a) Co-producing parenting practice: learning how to do child and family health nursing differently. Australian Journal of Child and Family Health Nursing 9, 7–11.
Fowler C, Rossiter C, Bigsby M, Hopwood N, Lee A, Dunston R (2012b) Working in partnership with parents: the experience and challenge of practice innovation in child and family health nursing. Journal of Clinical Nursing 21, 3306–3314.
| Working in partnership with parents: the experience and challenge of practice innovation in child and family health nursing.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 22994916PubMed |
Hopwood N, Clerke T (2012) ‘Partnership and pedagogy in child and family health practice: a resource for professionals, educators and students.’ (Lambert Academic Publishing: Hertsellung)
Hopwood N, Dunston R, Clerke T (2013a) The Family Partnership Model in practice in New South Wales: working with families with complex needs to make a difference. Case study of good practice for Governance International. Available at http://www.govint.org/good-practice/case-studies/the-family-partnership-model-in-practice-in-new-south-wales/ [Verified 18 July 2013]
Hopwood N, Fowler C, Lee A, Rossiter C, Bigsby M (2013b) Understanding partnership practice in child and family nursing through the concept of practice architectures. Nursing Inquiry 20, 199–210.
| Understanding partnership practice in child and family nursing through the concept of practice architectures.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 23336287PubMed |
Keatinge D, Fowler C, Briggs C (2008) Evaluating the Family Partnership Model (FPM) program and implementation in practice in New South Wales, Australia. The Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing 25, 28–35.
Kelly GA (1955) ‘The psychology of personal constructs.’ (Norton: New York)
Layiou-Lignos E, Tsiantis J, Hilton D, Rudic N, Puura K, Paradisiotou A, Ispanovic-Radojkovic V, Roberts R, Hadjipanayi Y, Dejan R, Mantymaa M, Tamminen T (2005) Training for primary health care practitioners. International Journal of Mental Health Promotion 7, 41–53.
| Training for primary health care practitioners.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Lee A, Dunston R, Fowler C (2012) Seeing is believing: an embodied pedagogy of ‘doing partnership’ in child and family health. In ‘Practice, learning and change: practice-theory perspectives on professional learning’. (Eds P Hager, A Lee, A Reich) pp. 267–276. (Springer: Dordrecht)
NSW Department of Health (2009) ‘NSW Health/Families NSW supporting families early package.’ (NSW Department of Health: Sydney)
Rogers C (1959) A theory of therapy, personality and interpersonal relationships as developed in the client-centred framework. In ‘Psychology: a study of a science, vol. 3: formulations of the person and the social context’. (Ed S Koch) pp. 184–256. (McGraw Hill: New York)
Rossiter C, Fowler C, Hopwood N, Lee A, Dunston R (2011) Working in partnership with vulnerable families: the experience of child and family health practitioners. Australian Journal of Primary Health 17, 378–383.
| Working in partnership with vulnerable families: the experience of child and family health practitioners.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 22112707PubMed |
Vygotsky LS (1962) ‘Thought and language.’ (Wiley: New York)
Vygotsky LS (1978) ‘Mind in society: the development of higher psychological processes.’ (Harvard University Press: London)
Wertsch J (2007) Mediation. In ‘The Cambridge companion to Vygotsky’. (Eds H Daniels, M Cole, J Wertsch) pp. 178–192. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge)
Wilson HV (2001) Power and partnership: a critical analysis of the surveillance discourse of child health nurses. Journal of Advanced Nursing 36, 294–301.
| Power and partnership: a critical analysis of the surveillance discourse of child health nurses.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 1:STN:280:DC%2BD3MrjsVWksQ%3D%3D&md5=610827f6b6c5459cf3dbf8fbc3743bf8CAS | 11580805PubMed |