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Writing History: Case Study of the University of Victoria School of Nursing

  • Margaret R. Scaia EMAIL logo und Lynne Young
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 8. Juni 2013

Abstract

A historical examination of a nursing curriculum is a bridge between past and present from which insights to guide curriculum development can be gleaned. In this paper, we use the case study method to examine how the University of Victoria School of Nursing (UVic SON), which was heavily influenced by the ideology of second wave feminism, contributed to a change in the direction of nursing education from task-orientation to a content and process orientation. This case study, informed by a feminist lens, enabled us to critically examine the introduction of a “revolutionary” caring curriculum at the UVic SON. Our research demonstrates the fault lines and current debates within which a feminist informed curriculum continues to struggle for legitimacy and cohesion. More work is needed to illuminate the historical basis of these debates and to understand more fully the complex landscape that has constructed the social and historical position of women and nursing in Canadian society today.

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Published Online: 2013-06-08

©2013 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin / Boston

Artikel in diesem Heft

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