Assessment 2:
Empathy Mapping – Collaboration
inclusion and
person-centredness
Type:Oral and visual activity
Weighting:40%
Method:Group andIndependent
Length:Word documents (750 words+/-10%) Group work / PowerPoint slide (3 minutes recording) Independent work
Submission type:Word file (Group) and a PowerPoint audio recording (Independent)
Assessment description
This assessment explores more deeply self-awareness and person-centred practice in nursing.
The assessment explores ‘the self’ in the context of collaborative practice in nursing, working as a team or group and peer learning.
This assessment supports a deeper understanding of self-awareness by understanding different aspects of us that are in action when we work in groups to identify
and discuss the complex ways nurses manage the bodies of others with a specific focus on emotional labour and person-centred nursing practice.
Christina has strong links and relationships with Indigenous Australians because of her heritage and identity. People sometimes find her background confusing because she has pale skin and blonde hair. When people seem genuinely interested, she always takes the time to explain the meaning behind being an Aboriginal Australian. On the afternoon that she arrived at a hospital emergency department (ED) with her seriously ill two-year-old son, she had no time to explain anything, although she ticked the box on her admission form to identify her son as an Indigenous Australian.
She attended the ED of a busy metropolitan hospital because her son was having an extreme allergic reaction to peanuts. That day her family and friends had come together for a children’s birthday party for her five-year-old daughter. The party was a large gathering of toddlers and pre-schoolers who enjoyed an afternoon’s festivities. Near the end of the party, following the cutting and eating of the cake, she noticed her two-year-old son was showing signs of a severe allergic reaction. She had seen it before and knew exactly what to do.
Not knowing for sure what had caused the reaction, she administered adrenaline and set out for the local hospital, a two-minute car trip from home. On the way she remembered that she that she had decorated the cake with ‘hundreds and thousands’ that had been stored in a jar that previously contained peanuts. Her two-year-old son had reacted immediately after eating the cake.
On arrival, she quickly explained what was happening to the triage nurse in the ED. She told him of her son’s history and the events of the day, stating that she and her son needed to be seen immediately as her son has a severe allergic reaction to peanuts. The nurse’s response was not in keeping with the seriousness of the circumstances and he asked her to be seated. She became quite distressed, stating in a loud voice that she and her son must be seen immediately. He replied, ‘Have a seat, and wait like everybody else’.
Knowing she had no time and knowing of another hospital two minutes away she picked up her son, who was by now unable to walk and went to a second hospital. There her son was stabilised in the ED ad admitted to the intensive care unit. Although he recovered physically, Christina had difficulty recovering emotionally from her treatment in the ED of the first hospital; she felt traumatised.
She retained the services of a lawyer and obtained the ED record of her son’s admission under the right to freedom of information. On the record she read: ‘Aboriginal woman, dishevelled, wearing dirty clothes, with a two-year-old in her arms, loudly demanding to be seen immediately. Child appears dirty unkempt and possibly neglected, not in keeping with developmental milestones as he is crawling. Strong smell of alcohol on the mother’s breath. Mother seems hysterical and believes the child is having a reaction to peanuts. Not able to confirm allergy. Plan is to contact the children’s services department and have the child seen by a social worker. Mother told to wait. Triaged to category 3.
Christina filed a formal complaint against the hospital and the nurse. She was pleased to hear that this resulted in action being taken against the nurse, who was removed from further triage duty. Christina was satisfied knowing that this nurse would not have a further opportunity to make decisions that could have dire consequences purely based on a racial stereotype(after Stein-Parbury, 2018).
Assessment instructions
Group
Responding to a provided case scenario, complete an Empathy Map by responding with six to eight full sentences in each of the sections. The sentences can be arranged using bullet points:
Hearing: What does this person (Christina) hear from healthcare professionals?
Seeing: What does this person (Christina) see around them?
Doing: What is the person (Christina) doing?
Saying: What is this person’s (Christina’s) perspective?
Fears and frustrations: What are this person’s (Christina’s) fears and/or frustrations?
Wants and needs: What does this person (Christina) want and need?
Answer the question as a group:
‘What do you want the reader (or viewer, or listener) to take away?
On a second page (part of the same Word document) please complete your peer assessment:
Provide an evaluation of your group’s submission using this table:
Selection of a method of communication and inclusion
|
How well did the group communicate with each other and how well did the group include all members?
|
Excellent
|
Good
|
Satisfactory
|
Allocation of tasks
|
How inclusively did you decide as a group who would do what, and by when?
|
Excellent
|
Good
|
Satisfactory
|
Managing changes
|
How well did the group communicate with each other to let other group members know about suggested changes to agreed tasks, any unavoidable absences, and ways to mitigate it, progress, or lack of it on a given task?
|
Excellent
|
Good
|
Satisfactory
|
Concerns about process or contributions
|
How well did the group communicate to raise concerns to the whole group, and to decide what actions might be taken and when concerns should be escalated to the teaching team?
|
Excellent
|
Good
|
Satisfactory
|
Individual
On a PowerPoint Slide make a 3-minute-long
audio
recording of yourself answering these questions.
What is the importance of this story?
What more do you need to know about the concepts that you read into this story?
What have you learned about yourself in the context of human diversity from reading and thinking about this story?
Reflect on peer learning through the group component of this assessment.
How did you feel about your involvement in the group?
What was the basis of that feeling of involvement?
How did it feel to be completing the empathy map as a group?
What would have helped the situation?
What conclusion would you draw from the experience of peer learning through the shared completion of the empathy map part of the assessment?
Note:You may personalise the slides with graphics or text. The graphics and/or text may be referenced if this aligns with the principles of referencing using APA 7th edition style and referencing for this assessment.
Scaffolding within the unit which supports students in this assessment:
Students will consider the principles of a person-centred framework for practice in Weeks One to Five of the semester.
Students will also be familiar with the NMBA (2016) Standards for Practice and Code of Practice for the Registered Nurse as the professional context for
focusing on 'knowing self' and working collaboratively.
Does student learning happen
through
this assessment? If so, describe that learning:
The learning supported by this assessment includes an exploration of self-awareness and self-evaluation to begin to develop skills for working together and collaboration. The assessment also provides an opportunity to practice communication in relation to the topic areas of empathy, emotional labour, and inclusivity. This assessment also supports possibilities for students to take collective responsibility for their learning and to cooperate to reach mutual goals which are integral for person-centred practice.
Assessment formatting guidelines
- File type: word document (group), PowerPoint audio recording (independent)
- File formatting specifications (if any): n/a
- Referencing style: APA 7th edition style
- Cover sheet (if required): cover sheet including student ID numbers for group work and student ID number for independent work
- Students' names are not to be included on any assessment tasks/submissions. Only student ID numbers should be included (as per theAssessment PolicyandAssessment Procedures).
- Please note this assessment will be reviewed by the University’s plagiarism checking software (Ouriginal) and, with reasonable grounds, be subject to further inquiry through the Office of the Associate Dean of Education.
Support resources
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