‘Disciplining witnesses’ in the teaching of physiotherapy: Some insights into the practical accomplishment of a science-based healthcare profession

Authors

  • Clare Kell Cardiff University
  • Tom Horlick-Jones Cardiff University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v9i3.253

Keywords:

ethnography, movement, practical accomplishment, physiotherapy, science education, touch

Abstract

Physiotherapy in the UK defines itself as a ‘science based healthcare profession’. Physiotherapy students must undertake at least one thousand hours of learning in live practice settings. Adopting an analytic stance shaped by interaction analysis and workplace studies, and drawing on observational data of placement settings, this paper examines some features of the means by which physiotherapy education is practically accomplished. The paper introduces and utilises a novel notational system for capturing movement and touch in ethnographic fieldwork notes. Our analysis draws upon ideas from Lynch and Macbeth’s (1998) study of elementary school science classes. We focus in particular on their notion of ‘disciplining witnesses’ to illustrate how science is enacted – and plays a privileged role – within the everyday accomplishment of practice-based physiotherapy education. We show how patients are disciplined to provide information on cue and to act as props for therapeutic demonstrations, while students are disciplined to co-produce standard interpretations of the science of physiotherapy. We conclude the paper with a brief discussion of the ways in which these insights offer a new perspective for physiotherapy practitioners and educators in understanding the nature of interactions entailed in their professional practice, and the role of patients within those interactions.

Author Biographies

  • Clare Kell, Cardiff University
    Clare Kell was a practitioner and teacher of physiotherapy for some years. She has completed a Professional Doctorate at Cardiff University School of Social Sciences where her research into physiotherapy education has been supervised by Tom Horlick-Jones and Jane Salisbury.
  • Tom Horlick-Jones, Cardiff University
    Tom Horlick-Jones is a Professor of Sociology in Cardiff School of Social Sciences. He is perhaps best known for his investigations into risk-related behaviour, and associated reasoning, communication and decision making processes. His current research is concerned primarily with knowledge work in policy-making; the experience of serious illness; and the practical accomplishment of professional work.

Published

2013-09-17

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Kell, C., & Horlick-Jones, T. (2013). ‘Disciplining witnesses’ in the teaching of physiotherapy: Some insights into the practical accomplishment of a science-based healthcare profession. Communication and Medicine, 9(3), 253-268. https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v9i3.253

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