Literature DB >> 28573596

Advancing Pre-Health Humanities as Intensive Research Practice: Principles and Recommendations from a Cross-Divisional Baccalaureate Setting.

Sarah Ann Singer1, Kym Weed2, Jennifer Edwell2, Jordynn Jack2, Jane F Thrailkill2.   

Abstract

This essay argues that pre-health humanities programs should focus on intensive research practice for baccalaureate students and provides three guiding principles for implementing it. Although the interdisciplinary nature of health humanities permits baccalaureate students to use research methods from the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities, pre-health humanities coursework tends to force students to adopt only one of many disciplinary identities. Alternatively, an intensive research approach invites students to critically select and combine methods from multiple (and seemingly opposing) disciplines to ask and answer questions about health problems more innovatively. Using the authors' experiences with implementing health humanities baccalaureate research initiatives at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the authors contend that pre-health humanities programs should teach and study multiple disciplinary research methods and their values; examine how health humanities research might transfer across disciplines; and focus on mentoring opportunities for funding, presenting, and publishing research. These recommendations have the potential to create unprecedented research experiences for baccalaureate students as they prepare to enter careers within and beyond the allied health professions.

Keywords:  Baccalaureate; Health humanities lab; Interdisciplinarity; Research methods; Transfer

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28573596     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-017-9452-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  7 in total

1.  The pipeline. Benefits of undergraduate research experiences.

Authors:  Susan H Russell; Mary P Hancock; James McCullough
Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-04-27       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Choreographing lived experience: dance, feelings and the storytelling body.

Authors:  Karin Eli; Rosie Kay
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2015-01-05

3.  Should medical humanities be a multidisciplinary or an interdisciplinary study?

Authors:  H M Evans; J Macnaughton
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2004-06

4.  Medical humanities in undergraduate medical education--moving on.

Authors:  R Meakin
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2002-06

5.  Rethinking medical humanities.

Authors:  Luca Chiapperino; Giovanni Boniolo
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2014-12

6.  The limits of narrative: provocations for the medical humanities.

Authors:  Angela Woods
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2011-10-28

7.  'The medical' and 'health' in a critical medical humanities.

Authors:  Sarah Atkinson; Bethan Evans; Angela Woods; Robin Kearns
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2015-03
  7 in total

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