scholarly journals Professional identity construction: becoming and being a dietician in Brazil, France and Spain

Author(s):  
Maria Clara de Moraes Prata Gaspar ◽  
Cristina Larrea-Killinger

Professional socialization is a complex process that leads to the professional identity. While several studies have focused on the professional identity of physicians and nurses, few studies analyzed this aspect among dieticians. Furthermore, those studies did not consider the influence of sociocultural norms. The aim of this study was to analyze the construction of the professional identity of Brazilian, French and Spanish dieticians. A qualitative methodology based on semi-structured interviews was set up. The construction of the professional identity of Brazilian, French and Spanish dieticians is characterized by the incorporation of skills, knowledge and roles. This process was marked by transformations, mainly related to food and body. Dieticians from the three nationalities shared similar professional values grounded in a medical-nutritional rationale. However, their professional identity also resulted from a continuous process of interaction with patients, peers and the socio-cultural environment.

2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ionela Vlase

Abstract: The article addresses the largely debated linkages between gender and migration, on the one hand, and the impact of migration on migrants’ society of origin, on the other hand. Based on multi-sited research conducted in a village from Eastern Romania and in Rome (the main destination of the population studied), this paper highlights gender differences in the participation to migration process and in the contribution of migrants to the socio-economic development of their society. Using a qualitative methodology based on semi-structured interviews with migrants and participant observations, the research reveals different meanings that migrants (women and men) invest in their actions (i.e. transfers of ideas, money or durable goods and set-up of small local businesses). This study contributes to the understanding of the gendered contribution of migrants to the economic and socio-cultural transformations of their society of origin.


2021 ◽  
pp. 0095327X2110222
Author(s):  
Joel Nilsson ◽  
Johan Österberg

This article examines the experiences of newly graduated officers and specialist officers, as they recently entered employment in the Swedish Armed Forces. Building on 35 interviews, this article illustrates the dynamics of excessive workload and an unstructured working environment, and how embedded strategies for mentoring and guidance can reduce negative outcomes associated with the workload. The article introduces the concept of career time, reflecting the participant’s propensity to perform unpaid work to pursue a career in the organization. This study reveals tensions between organizational and employee interests, and experiences of exclusion from the officer profession, contextualized drawing on classical theorists Foucault and Habermas. When restructuring organizations, the quest for efficiency can outweigh professional values, such as esprit de corps and taking pride in work and professional identity.


Author(s):  
Tariq Mehmood Bhuttah ◽  
Chen Xiaoduan ◽  
Hakim Ullah

Distance education is popular among the education students of the Virtual University.  This study aims to examine the current curriculum content in distance education to gauge if they are still able to keep the students engaged.  To be able to do that, a variety of ICT technologies have been set up in the university to cater to the needs of the distance education students majoring in educational management.  A qualitative methodology was used specifically using semi-structured interviews on ten randomly chosen respondents representing all the four years of college study, and a representative for each gender.  This was done to capture all the possible answers they may give in terms of their cultural backgrounds, their gender and their social status. The results showed that among their five lessons for this semester, the most popular were Conflict Resolution and Community Relations.  The least popular was school finance.  In terms of the level of engagement and interest levels, most of the respondents had high scores of 9 and above which showed their high interest in the course they are studying.  The presence of the ICT technology has definitely enhanced their experience and most respondents have said that they are very thankful for the experiences they’ve had with the learning management systems (LMS) because it allowed them to interact with their co-students and teachers from Taiwan. These interactions have served as the respondents’ bridge to learning how other cultures teach these particular topics and how they process their learnings as well.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mariana Lazzaro-Salazar

<p>The increasing nursing shortage experienced in healthcare institutions alongsidethe communicative issuesrelated to multiculturalnursing teams have placed nurses at the centre of the stage in a growing body of healthcare-related research. In this context, the values, beliefs and conceptualizations which characterize a nurse‘s professional identity play a significant role in organizational life since they guide nurses‘ decisions on the kind of clinical practices they adopt and influence their work performance. However, there islittle empirical evidence on how nurses discursivelyconstruct their professional identity.To date most sociolinguistic research on professional identity in healthcare environments has focused on the power asymmetries characterising doctor-patient, doctor-nurse and nurse-patient discourse, largely disregarding nurse-nurse interaction. Thus, moving away from the traditional approach taken to this area of enquiry, this thesis considershow nurses from an array of ethnic backgrounds construct their professional identity throughdiscursive practices as they interact with other nurses in workplace meetings. The data for this study involve nurses and nurse managers in a ward of a public healthcare institution andata private healthcare institution in New Zealand. The data consist of audio and video recordings of four roster and five handover meetings from the hospital and four clinical and four staff meetings from the clinic, collected by employing Interactional Sociolinguistics as a methodological approach which provides anethnographic lensand afocus on context and culture. To investigate professional identity construction, the analysis takes a theoretical stance which draws on social constructionismand social identity theoryand exploresprofessional identity as it emerges within the boundaries of local interaction and practices. Nurses‘ professional identity formation is consideredin three interactional contexts, namely, voicing and responding to complaints, displaying professional expertise, and negotiating professional values. Findings demonstratethat nurses index multiple group membership alignments as a way to ̳indirectly‘ voice direct complaints and to respond to them in community-appropriate ways as they build in-group solidarity and rapport, and observe interactants‘ face needs.In addition, considerations ofthe use of question-answer adjacency pairs, medical jargon and rationality of case presentation show how expertise construction belongs in a dynamic continuum which is actively transited by nurses as they construct themselves and others as more or less expert on differentaspects of professional practice. Consideringnurses‘ expert claims astemporary, nurses are shown to construct multiple self and other subject positions at the local and wider community levels in order to achieve different interactional goals.This thesis also shows how, when evaluating professional practice, nurses negotiate their professional values at both local and wider community levels by indexing multiple group alignments and displaying expertise that positively construct their professional stance,and by using persuasion techniques that ascribe preferred professional images with the aim of standardising professional practices. Overall, theresearch highlights the partial nature of identity construction as other-initiatedclaims cause nurses to re-consider their stance in order to orienttowards a preferred professional image of themselves, makingsituationally motivated selections of their discursive resources to craft their identity claims.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mariana Lazzaro-Salazar

<p>The increasing nursing shortage experienced in healthcare institutions alongsidethe communicative issuesrelated to multiculturalnursing teams have placed nurses at the centre of the stage in a growing body of healthcare-related research. In this context, the values, beliefs and conceptualizations which characterize a nurse‘s professional identity play a significant role in organizational life since they guide nurses‘ decisions on the kind of clinical practices they adopt and influence their work performance. However, there islittle empirical evidence on how nurses discursivelyconstruct their professional identity.To date most sociolinguistic research on professional identity in healthcare environments has focused on the power asymmetries characterising doctor-patient, doctor-nurse and nurse-patient discourse, largely disregarding nurse-nurse interaction. Thus, moving away from the traditional approach taken to this area of enquiry, this thesis considershow nurses from an array of ethnic backgrounds construct their professional identity throughdiscursive practices as they interact with other nurses in workplace meetings. The data for this study involve nurses and nurse managers in a ward of a public healthcare institution andata private healthcare institution in New Zealand. The data consist of audio and video recordings of four roster and five handover meetings from the hospital and four clinical and four staff meetings from the clinic, collected by employing Interactional Sociolinguistics as a methodological approach which provides anethnographic lensand afocus on context and culture. To investigate professional identity construction, the analysis takes a theoretical stance which draws on social constructionismand social identity theoryand exploresprofessional identity as it emerges within the boundaries of local interaction and practices. Nurses‘ professional identity formation is consideredin three interactional contexts, namely, voicing and responding to complaints, displaying professional expertise, and negotiating professional values. Findings demonstratethat nurses index multiple group membership alignments as a way to ̳indirectly‘ voice direct complaints and to respond to them in community-appropriate ways as they build in-group solidarity and rapport, and observe interactants‘ face needs.In addition, considerations ofthe use of question-answer adjacency pairs, medical jargon and rationality of case presentation show how expertise construction belongs in a dynamic continuum which is actively transited by nurses as they construct themselves and others as more or less expert on differentaspects of professional practice. Consideringnurses‘ expert claims astemporary, nurses are shown to construct multiple self and other subject positions at the local and wider community levels in order to achieve different interactional goals.This thesis also shows how, when evaluating professional practice, nurses negotiate their professional values at both local and wider community levels by indexing multiple group alignments and displaying expertise that positively construct their professional stance,and by using persuasion techniques that ascribe preferred professional images with the aim of standardising professional practices. Overall, theresearch highlights the partial nature of identity construction as other-initiatedclaims cause nurses to re-consider their stance in order to orienttowards a preferred professional image of themselves, makingsituationally motivated selections of their discursive resources to craft their identity claims.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Mutseta

The ensuing study is an assessment of factors influencing the establishment of the common new marital arrangement and examining the power dynamics within this form of marriage and the effects it has on the family form and structure in Zimbabwe’s urban space. The findings made herein show that inasmuch as the general beliefs constrains small housing, residents of Glen Norah are knowledgeable actors who act in contrast to beliefs. Everywhere in Zimbabwe’s urban areas, ‘Small House’ phenomenon is a topical issue and now it seems as it is difficult to envisage an urban set up without this phenomenon. ‘Small house’ is a marital practice which allows the extension of the monogamous marriage institution into a quasi-polygamous system, in a nostalgic cultural way, creating a new form of marriage between two ideologies, that of modernity, and cultural adherence. Structuration thesis was utilised as a theoretical framework. To meet the study objectives, qualitative methodology instrumented by semi-structured interviews and key informant interviews were adopted. Purposive and convenience sampling were utilised as sampling techniques. Findings show that most adults in Glen Norah are involved in the modified-clandestine polygyny commonly known as small house institution. Socioeconomic and psychological factors are attributed to the phenomenon as individuals have various motives in small housing. The small house institution has similar functions, roles and structure as those found in established monogamous families. The small house union is an emergent form of a family which is ‘fluid and a floating structured structure’ which also resulted from the interplay between ‘conflicting structures’ and ‘convenient agency’. Small House practice in Glen Norah has become a social common denominator as men and women across social strata are practising this phenomenon.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
Debbie MacLellan ◽  
Jacqui Gingras ◽  
Daphne Lordly ◽  
Jennifer Brady

This paper explores beginning dietetic practitioners’ perspectives on the process of becoming dietetics professionals through the use of vignettes to illuminate the complex process of professional socialization.  Embedded in these vignettes are three themes related to the socialization process that occurs in the early years of dietetic practice: congruence, resilience, and relationships.  Our findings indicate that new dietitians struggle to develop their dietitian identity.  They feel unprepared for the relational and practice realities of the workplace and find the transition from dietetic intern to dietitian challenging.  They seek many ways to cope including seeking support from others and planning for the future but some consider leaving the profession.  It is important to understand the professional socialization and identity formation processes that occur during the early years of practice to ensure that dietitians feel prepared and supported as they begin their careers.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 201-211
Author(s):  
Morten Pilegaard ◽  
Hanne Berg Ravn

Regional research ethics committee (REC) members have voiced a need for the linguistic improvement of informed consent documents to ensure duly informed consent and to ease committee deliberation. We have little knowledge of what elements of language use hamper comprehension, or of the extent of medical researchers’ appreciation of this problem and their willingness to accept intervention. This qualitative, explorative study proposes an intervention design and tests its feasibility and acceptability. Semi-structured interviews with potential REC applicants informed a linguistic intervention benchmarked against existing guidelines, mandated locally and nationally, and then evaluated quantitatively in a semi-controlled set-up and qualitatively via questionnaires. Potential applicants professed the psychological acceptability of linguistic intervention. The intervention comprised a downloadable Microsoft Word template outlining information structure, a detailed guideline offering advice for each move and self-selected linguistic screening. It was used by 14 applicants and had a measurable effect on REC deliberation time and approval rates. The intervention instruments overall made it easier for applicants to produce informed consent documents meeting prescribed ethical standards concerning lay-friendliness. In conclusion, it was found that linguistic intervention is relevant, feasible and psychologically acceptable to REC applicants; it aids their text production process and seems to enhance the lay-friendliness of these texts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Luara Carvalho ◽  
Elisa Maria Barbosa de Amorim-Ribeiro ◽  
Marcelo do Vale Cunha ◽  
Luciana Mourão

AbstractWork experiences during undergraduate studies can be remarkable in the journey of undergraduate students. The objective of this study was to assess, by analyzing semantic networks, the role of work experiences in the meanings those individuals attribute to professional identity. The sample consisted of 2291 students (60% women) divided into three groups: do not work, work in a field related to their course, work in a field not related to their course. The semantic networks of these groups were composed of words uttered from the professional identity prime. We chose to work with the critical network, obtained from the analysis of the incidence-fidelity indexes of the word pairs. The results evidence that work experiences are related to how undergraduate students attribute meaning to professional identity, in such a way that three different networks were formed for these groups. The network of those who work outside their field was the only one that integrated words with negative content, while the semantic networks of those who do not work and those who work in their field, despite containing words that do not always coincide, present a similar macrostructure. We conclude that work experiences play an important role in the meanings that undergraduate students attribute to professional identity. The study innovates by revealing elements of professional-identity construction, besides allowing for reflections on the effects of work experiences during the college period.


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