Date post: | 22-Nov-2014 |
Category: |
Education |
Upload: | educational-development-division-university-of-liverpool |
View: | 1,358 times |
Download: | 0 times |
How can visual arts help doctors develop insight?
Tate Liverpool: short course for medical students: Developing Medical Insight Using the Visual ArtsThursday, 19th February, 10am to 4:30pm: a day of stimulation, challenge and inspiration
--email Maggie Hammond for information / to book a place [email protected]
Kathy Edmonds,Kathy Edmonds,Senior Lecturer, Senior Lecturer,
Youth and Community Work Youth and Community Work Glyndŵr UniversityGlyndŵr University
Developing skills:ObservationalInterpretive Descriptive Emotional recognitionIdentification of story and
narrative Communication
JudgementDecision-makingIntuitionUncertaintyBias
10 students x 2Randomly selected from 44 applications10am – 4:30 pm:
Coffee and welcomeIntroductions and connectionsWords and visuals—preconceptions and
meaningWork in focus and connections– three wordsWays of lookingThemes—health, death, emotion, conflictEvaluation and tea
Notes from the dayWritten reflections by email (75% return)Focus group:
3 students randomly selected from each dayFacilitated by colleagueRecorded and transcribed by notetaker£20 Amazon voucher
‘HOME’‘POINTING MAN’
‘MORNING’‘HYENA STOMP’
‘THE BATH’
Hyena Stomp 1962, Frank Stella
Image removed due to copyright, to view please visithttp://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ViewWork?workid=13816
‘My favourite part of the day was finding the art that we had attempted to draw.
My piece was quite obscure and at first I was sceptical about it but talking to the assistant completely changed my opinion.
I was surprised at how much I warmed to the art just from hearing an explanation but this inspired me to look deeper at other pieces of work.’
Confidence buildingListening skillsChallenging, new ways of thinkingHow we make judgements
Learning new things: Art appreciationSkills in using the gallery
‘I now feel happy visiting an art gallery and won’t be having an internal laugh at those people who are staring at pieces of art which I personally give no value – I will instead wonder what it is that those people are thinking and why it is that they can appreciate what I cannot.’
‘I hope I have gained better listening skills, practice at “thinking outside the box” and a better appreciation of art, something which I intend to continue.’
the sceptic‘yes, vaguely...’more rounded person = better doctorsuperficial similarities or differences between
people/conditions treat each as individualLanguagemaintain your self-awarenessclinical judgement
make your own decisionsbe confident in describing what you see.
‘I think the day at the Tate used art to explore different perspectives and themes in life and I was surprised to see how this linked closely with medicine and our role as health professionals.’
‘The Tate experience of viewing art as a way to understand some of the complex concepts and emotions involved in personal reactions and the medical profession was inspiring.’
‘Aside from the obvious "don't judge a book by it's cover", I think reflection was of key importance. Spending time thinking about the art in different terms, i.e. visceral response, the context, the artist, etc., brought out a lot of information that wasn't visible at first glance. This obviously transfers nicely to medical practice.
The importance of discussion with a colleague to enable a differing perspective upon a work of art/ patient was also highlighted.’
medical school doesn’t allow time to relaxlittle opportunity to try something novelalways talking about and thinking about
medicinerefreshing, stimulated the imaginationguilt if you don’t work only on medicinesocial time and connections, sharing
‘When I have ‘free time’ I often feel that I still have to rush through things and never properly relax. I was so glad of the opportunity to do something new and with permission as well!’
‘It just helped us to really open our minds to something outside of the medical conforms yet drawing on our clinical experiences and challenged some of our preconceived ideas about health and communication.’’
‘Personal reflection and sharing concepts about impressions, assumptions, emotions, the way you make judgements and the way you see what is in front of you as a whole picture are not normally accessible on a day to day basis.’
Bathers at Moritzburg 1909/26, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Image removed due to copyright, to view please visitwww.tate.org.uk/servlet/ViewWork?workid=7967