Final published version
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Mind the gap
T2 - The relationship between liminality, learning and leaving in pre-registration nurse education
AU - Crane, J.
AU - Abbott, M.-L.
PY - 2021/1/31
Y1 - 2021/1/31
N2 - Attrition refers to students leaving programmes of study before completion. This is an important topic area; there is a current global shortage of nurses, and it is widely reported that nursing is in crisis. Nurse education in the United Kingdom has changed substantially in the past fifty years, gradually moving from work-based apprentice style training to an ‘all graduate entry’ profession. There is a plethora of literature reporting attrition both in the UK and worldwide. It is clear that regardless of the education model, attrition from pre-registration programmes is a long-standing problem which has attracted much attention. The educative process of learning to be a nurse can be likened to a ‘rite of passage’, or perhaps a series of rites of passage. Rites of passage were first articulated by anthropologists, van Gennep and Turner. Van Gennep and Turner argued that as people make ‘transitions’, often via ‘rites of passage’ they pass through an in-between phase described as ‘liminal’. This paper explores aspects of liminality in nurse education and examines the potential relationship with attrition. The paper concludes by suggesting that although liminality could be considered a risk factor for attrition, exploitation of the concept may offer opportunities to enhance learning.
AB - Attrition refers to students leaving programmes of study before completion. This is an important topic area; there is a current global shortage of nurses, and it is widely reported that nursing is in crisis. Nurse education in the United Kingdom has changed substantially in the past fifty years, gradually moving from work-based apprentice style training to an ‘all graduate entry’ profession. There is a plethora of literature reporting attrition both in the UK and worldwide. It is clear that regardless of the education model, attrition from pre-registration programmes is a long-standing problem which has attracted much attention. The educative process of learning to be a nurse can be likened to a ‘rite of passage’, or perhaps a series of rites of passage. Rites of passage were first articulated by anthropologists, van Gennep and Turner. Van Gennep and Turner argued that as people make ‘transitions’, often via ‘rites of passage’ they pass through an in-between phase described as ‘liminal’. This paper explores aspects of liminality in nurse education and examines the potential relationship with attrition. The paper concludes by suggesting that although liminality could be considered a risk factor for attrition, exploitation of the concept may offer opportunities to enhance learning.
KW - Attrition
KW - Liminality
KW - Nurse education
KW - Threshold concepts
KW - anthropology
KW - attention
KW - educational model
KW - human
KW - human experiment
KW - learning
KW - nursing education
KW - review
KW - risk factor
U2 - 10.1016/j.nepr.2020.102952
DO - 10.1016/j.nepr.2020.102952
M3 - Journal article
VL - 50
JO - Nurse Education in Practice
JF - Nurse Education in Practice
SN - 1471-5953
M1 - 102952
ER -