Assuming Practice Assuming Problems Sociology and Nursng Education Edit
Transcript of Assuming Practice Assuming Problems Sociology and Nursng Education Edit
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Assuming Practice, Assuming Problems: Sociology and Nursing Education
Abstract:There has been a rather intense and long running debate in the literature concerning the
value of sociology for the discipline of nursing, beginning with Hannah Cookes (1993a)article Why teach Sociology? Cookes critical concerns can serve as the foundation for
some important theoretical work regarding nursing, and more specifically nursingeducation. That important work, I intend to suggest, is sociological in nature. In thispaper then, I argue that sociology is not only relevant to nursing education, but indeed
essential precisely because of its tendency to problematize problems. I begin first with a
brief overview of the discussion/debate in the nursing literature regarding the value of
sociology to nursing (education). Next, I discuss the concept ofassuming practice andhow it relates to nursing education as well as nursings history of social responsibility.
Following this I provide an overview ofsocial problems theory as an example of how
and what kind of sociology can be usefully taught to nursing students, and finally, Idiscussion how such an important sociological approach is germane to nursing education.
Acknowledgements:
The author would like to extend a special thank you to Dr. Dorothy Pawluch, Departmentof Sociology, McMaster University for encouraging me to write this paper and providing
critical feedback.
Introduction:
There has been a rather intense and long running debate in the literatureconcerning the value of sociology for the discipline of nursing. Beginning with Hannah
Cookes (1993a) article Why teach Sociology? and Sharpes (1994;1995; 1996) critique
of both it and sociology as a value for nursing, followed by Porters (1995; 1996; 1997)critique of Sharpe and defence of sociology in nursing education there appeared a number
of articles dealing with the issue (Balsamo & Martin, 1995a; Balsamo & Martin, 1995b;Mulholland, 1997; Williamson, 1999; Allen, 2001; Pinikahana, 2003; Holland; 2004;
Aranda & Law, 2007). Cooke (1993) initiated the debate by calling for a more
critical and theoretically informed sociology for nurses, (p. 210) for the thedevelopment of a new way of looking at the world one which calls into question much
that we have taken for granted, (p. 211) and to allow us to imagine new futures for
nursing and to question the current ideological consensus within it. (p. 215).These are certainly important questions and I will return to them shortly.
Although there is certainly no intellectual or academic consensus at present in nursing
(Thorne et. al., 1998), it might be argued that it does contain, with notable exceptions of
course, an ideological consensus regarding; a) educational relevancy (Ironside, 2004),which is to say that all education must be directly relevant to practice and b) an anti-
intellectual or task/technical ideology (Bradshaw, 1995), meaning that sophisticated
critique is viewed as little more than irrelevant academic speak. This is to say that, givenits very recent entrance into higher education, and its long history of subjugation and task
based work, nursing (both education and practice) is guilty ofassuming practice (a
concept I shall explain briefly).Hence, Cookes (1993a; 1993b) critical concerns can serve as the foundation for
some important theoretical work regarding nursing, and more specifically nursing
education. That important work, I intend to suggest, is sociological in nature. In thispaper then, I argue that sociology is not only relevant to nursing education, but indeed
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essential precisely because of its tendency to problematize problems. I begin first with abrief overview of the discussion/debate in the nursing literature regarding the value of
sociology to nursing (education). Next, I discuss the concept ofassuming practice and
how it relates to nursing education as well as nursings, often deemphasized, history ofsocial responsibility. Following this I provide an overview ofsocial problems theory as
an example of how and what kind of sociology can be usefully taught to nursing students,and finally, I discussion how such an important sociological approach is germane tonursing education.
The Sociological Debate:
As Porter (1996) put it The two basic lines of attack have been that sociology is
currently not being taught properly by nursing educationalists and, more radically, thatit ought not be taught in the first place (p. 170). For those who take the former
position, sociology does not only inform nursing practice, it also provides an emacipatory
agenda. Indeed, Cooke (1993a) stated as much with reference to C. Wright Mills Thesociological imagination shows us that existing social relations are not fixed and
immutable and thus it expands our consciousness of the different possibilities for the
future which are open to us. In this sense sociology is an emancipatory discipline. (p.215). Contrary to this, those who subscribe to the latter, claim that not only does it not
inform nursing practice, defined as it often is as the knowledgeable doer, (Balsamo &
Martin, 1995a; 1995b), or in Sharpes (1994) Ryleian view knowledge how [rather
than] knowledge that, (p. 392), but it risks introducing an epistemological confusion, ifyou will, into the practice of nursing. This epistemological confusion is the result of; a)
nursings practice imperative whatever else it may be, nursing work can be seen
primarily as a form of rational action; that is action which is oriented toward goals, on thebasis of knowledge about how these goals may most efficaciously be reached. (Sharpe,
1995, p. 53) and b) both the multiparadigmatic nature of sociology, and the lack ofdirectly applicable knowledge gleaned from sociological research.
In essence, the conflicting and controversial state of sociological theory reduces
its utility as a repository of stable and secure knowledge from which to confidently act(practice) in the world (clinical environment). Moreover, since a nurse does, and indeed
must, act (practice) in the world (clinical environment) sociology is; a) of little use and/or
b) unnecessarily confusing. Sharpes (1994; 1995) narrow view of nursing (knowledgehow rather than knowledge what) as a discipline has been, in my view, effectively dealt
with (see Porter, 1995; 1997; Mulholland, 1997; Williamson, 1999; Pinikahana, 2003).
The majority of arguments for the teaching of sociology in nursing remain
concerned, for the most part, with what it can contribute to nursing practice (directly)rather than the critical attitude of nursing students. In other words, the assumption is that
what nursing students should be taught is how to practice nursing and anything that does
not further this goal is simply moved into the category of unnecessary and irrelevant.However, Sharpe, in addition to his use of a knowing how and knowing that binary,
also juxtaposed apersonal education model with a semantic conjunction model (1994).
Where the former suggests that serious study of any academic discipline is usefulpreparation for professional practice, since it inculcates in the student certain general
intellectual and problem-solving skills, which will be transferred to the professional
setting, (p. 391) while the latter holds that it is the substantive subject matter of thediscipline concerned which is of relevance to the problems faced by the professionals.
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(p. 391). Sharpe (1994) rejects the personal education argument first, by suggesting thatas nursing moved away from the medical model and began to develop a more holistic
(bio-psycho-social) approach, in effect a body of knowledge which nurses regard as
legitimately their own (p. 392) the usefulness of sociology for this body ofknowledge, and as well the teaching of it to nursing students, becomes questionable, if
not outright irrelevant. Second, Sharp (1994) claims that if the rational for includingsociology in the curriculum was only the development of transferable intellectual skills,then philosophy would be as appropriate as sociology, and very possible better (p.
392). He further asserts that if the teaching of sociology was primarily an effort to foster
intellectual skills, one would expect such teaching to primarily include sociological
theory and methodology, rather, presumably, then the findings of sociological research.It is here in fact that I think the argument for sociology in nursing education needs to be
made. Indeed, it is sociological theory and methodology that should be taught to
nursing students, rather than merely the findings of sociological research. What Sharpefails to recognize is that nursing is an ineluctably social enterprise (more so than
philosophical, which is not say that philosophy is irrelevant) with respect to both practice
and its long history, though often only on paper, of social responsibility particularlywith reference to social problems. Put differently, many of the problems that nurses are
faced with in practice are social problems that manifest themselves in the individual need
of, or desire for, care (cardiac disease, AIDS, addiction, cancer, child abuse, spousal
abuse and so on).
Assuming Practice and Social Responsibility in Nursing Education:
Elsewhere I (Betts, 2006) used the phrase assuming practice to denote the
tendency in nursing to, not unlike the teaching to test that occurs with standardizedtesting, teach to practice. That is to outline a priori what nursing practice is and train
(rather than education) a student to perform it. In essence, I was referring to a tyranny ofrelevance, though I did not put it this way. A tyranny of relevance in nursing education
means that whatever is taught to a nursing student must somehow; a) have some direct
link to practice and b) be taught in a manner that leads to practice. Assuming practicedoes not allow for the possibility that nursing practice is varied, might be (as in could, or
should) be different and is certainly not emanciptory with respect to the student.
Moreover, it is a receipt for a dogmatic approach to both individuals being cared for bynurses and the society nurses provide service to.
Historically nursing has been viewed as a discipline that treats, cares for, or
responds to, individuals. Some have gone so far as to claim that it is not nursings
societal mandate to eliminate disease or redress the social determinants of health. Theseconcerns are certainly more central to knowledge domains such as epidemiology, public
health, and political sciences. (Pilkington & Mitchell, 2003, p. 105). However, as far
back as Nightingale social problems and social responsibility have been a significantfocus for nursing. Indeed Nightingale herself was responding to a social problem when
she headquartered her cadre of nurses at Scutari during the Crimean War in 1854. That
is, the social problem of the treatment of wounded soldiers. According to DeSantis andLipson (2007) The Committee on Curriculum for the National League for Nursing
(NLN) first published a curriculum guide in 1917 that included content on psychology,
sociology, social problems, and social problems in nursing service. (p. 7S). Indeed,many of the early nursing leaders (for example, Ethel Bedford-Fenwick, Lillian Wald,
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Lavinia Dock, Mary Adelaide Nutting, Clara Barton and numerous others of course)spoke often of social problems and nurses responsibility for them. For example, in 1907
Lavinia L. Dock (1907) wrote, in Some Urgent Social Claims:
But now the day has come when we might here decide on our place, our share,and our policy toward the great social claims of education and educational
reforms, industry and the industrial situation especially as it relates towomen-child-labor, its iniquities and dangers prostitution and the white slavetraffic with its trail of disease and death, and the recent movement to teach sexual
hygiene, to inculcate a single moral standard, and to combat venereal disease of
which we make so melancholy an acquaintance not only in the wards of city
hospitals but even among our private patients; this, one of the newest reform andeducational movements, proves perhaps more strikingly than any other that a new
conception of human society has arisen and that a new ideal is to be pursued for
the future. (p. 899)In 1931 Alice C. Lloyd (1931) wrote, in an article entitled Social Responsibility: An Aimof Nursing Education, that To place the nursing profession on a high level, its social
responsibility must come foremost in the conception of its duties. (p. 911). Moreover, in1941 Gladys Sellew (1941) wrote a book specifically titled Sociology and SocialProblems in Nursing Service. In short then, responsibility for social problems is nothing
new in nursing despite its often marginalized status.
Yet, in the mid-80s such social responsibility and social problems in nursingbecame a central position in the curriculum revolutions attempt to shift the paradigm of
nursing education from a Tylerian training model to a critical, emanciptory, higher
education agenda (National League for Nursing Board of Governors, 2005). Indeed thecurriculum revolution emphasized a, nearly, radical form of critique for nursing
education, citing such critical pedagogy theorists as Paulo Freire, Maxine Greene, HenryGiroux, Michael Apple and so on. As Chopoorian (1990) put it Without a critical
analysis of the social forces, economic conditions, and political climate influencing
nursing, society, and health care, the nursing profession may collapse We need to askhow social, political, economic, and cultural structures and fundamental societal
processes and human relations produce the problems we see in our daily work.. (p. 24).
The curriculum revolution then proposed a liberal education for nurses with anemancipatory programme that requires teachers to be meta-strategists, problem-posers,
consultants, and nurturers of curiosity, criticism, inquiry, caring, and meaning making.
(Bevis & Murray, 1990, p. 329). Although the original participates of the curriculum
revolution did not ignore nursing practice (indeed they addressed is all to well, albeitrather abstractly at times) neither did they assume practice. Rather, they recommended,
or perhaps demanded (it was after all a revolution), that nursing students be schooled in a
true higher education model. One perhaps similar to Girouxs (as cited by Rahmani,2004) view. That is:
nurturing those capacities that enable [students] to take risks, to make
democratic politics and public commitments central to their lives thatobligation does not simply rest on expanding the boundaries of knowledge for
students. It also rests on making students more aware of how knowledge can be
used as a social, intellectual, and theoretical resource It means usingknowledge in more than a narrowly instrumental way such as preparing for a
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job it also means critically embracing knowledge as a means of selfdevelopment tied to modes of learning and intellectual work that address matters
of human freedom, equality, and social justice to social change, to those modes
of moral witnessing necessary to transform the underlying systemic conditionsthat produce human suffering to prepare students for a very complex and
contradictory world, in which they are going to learn how to govern and notsimply be governed. (p. 647)In other words, educating nursing students, that is future professionals vested with
authority, trust and autonomy by society, to thinkaboutpractice rather then simplyfor
practice (Betts, 2006). Add to this Hagells (1989) comments, in her well know feminist
critique of the hegemony of the natural science model in nursing, Perhaps the mostimportant area for change should take place in nursing education [which] should
incorporate courses that are aimed at critically evaluating nursing theories and other
theories [including] alternative thought such as Marxism, feminism and criticaltheory. (p. 231). Finally, in his text for nursing students Social Theory and NursingPractice, Porter (1998) claims that, in addition to sociological research findings
contributing to practice, sociologys emphasis on critical reflection can encouragenurses to be more questioning and self aware (p. x). In other words, a multi-
paradigmatic view of, again, both the individuals nurses care for and the greater society
they serve has important value in-itself, that is, even if the results of this view do not
directly apply to nursing practice. It is here that sociologys multi-paradigmatic nature,epistemological confusion and diverse research agendas become invaluable. It is also the
answer, if I have done it justice, to Cookes (1993a) initial concerns. In effect, it is the
personal education model that Sharpe (1994) too easily rejects that ends up being of greatvalue for nursing education.
Social Problems Theory and Nursing Education:
I now wish to use Social Problems Theory (the sociology of social problems), its
history, development and controversies, to provide an example of the value that sociology
may well have for nursing education.According to Best (2003a) there are two mutually exclusive approaches to (the
sociology of) social problems. The first is the traditional model (what Best refers to as
the mainstream approach), that social problems exist as objective conditions of theworld which require solutions and moreover that one social problem (for example,
homelessness) has little to do with other social problems (say AIDS, rape, poverty,
crime etc). This is not to say that one cannot be homeless as a result of AIDS, rape,
crime and/or poverty, rather for a traditional perspective social problems are discreteentities that are, in a sense, self referring (homelessness refers to the problem of
homelessness). We might just as well label this the commonsense model in that, nearly
everyone (except a group of sociologist I will mention in a moment) holds this position.As Best (2003a) explains the mainstream approach to the sociology of social
problems is more than a century old [and] as sociologists began to identify many social
problems soon, there were books and courses titled Social Problems, and a direct lineof decent runs from them to their modern counterparts. (p. 134). Indeed, when nursing
students encounter social problems in their course of their study, this is how it will
invariably be presented to them.
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The second approach to social problems (the one taken by those sociologists I justmentioned) is concerned with the definition of social problems. By this I do not mean the
definition ofa social problem, but rather asking the question; is there anything,
sociological, that connects all social problems? It turns out that indeed there might beand that is how social problems are defined. Put simply then, the definitional
perspective essentially problematizes the traditional/mainstream/commonsense view ofwhat a social problem is. Although, as we shall see in a moment, the definitional view isnot a unified approach at all, it is concerned with how social problems are subjectively
(that is by individuals referring to social problems) defined, or in other words how a
social problem becomes (is constructed as) a social problem.
The history of the definitional perspective is rather complicated, however I shallattempt to briefly review it here. Early in the 20th century Frank (1925) claimed, in a
thoroughly objectivist fashion, that A social problem, then, appears to be any difficulty
or misbehavior of a fairly large number of persons which we wish to remove or correct,and the solution of a social problem is evidently the discovery of a method for this
removal or correction. (p. 463). This is clearly a mainstream approach. Waller (1936)
evinced similar views a decade later and even explicitly acknowledged a debt to Frankswork, however, as Himes (1955) put it Waller saw social problems as emerging from
conflicts between the organizational and the humanitarian mores. (p. 259). Hence, in
Waller, we clearly see the emergence of a subjectivist constituent to social problems
theory. Fuller and Myers (1941a; 1941b) later suggested that Every social problem hasboth an objective and a subjective aspect. where the objective element is a verifiable
condition, situation, or event. (1941a, p. 25). Although Fuller and Myers did indeed
admit to important subjectivist (definitional) characteristics of social problems, suchproblems were founded on realist assumptions. Such a constitution of social problems,
that is the combination of objective and subjective components has been referred to as thevalue-conflict theory of social problems, in that while the foundation is a material one,
there exists a conflict concerning the value of such a foundation. This is in contrast to
Merton and Nisbetts (1971, as cited by Kitsuse & Spector, 1973) functionalist view,which places significant emphasis on the objectivity of social problems, again
mainstream thinking. The value-conflict approach appears to have laid the groundwork
for a fuller articulation of the subjectivist views of, among others, Blumer (1971) andSpector and Kitsuse (1973; Kitsuse & Spector, 1973) in the early 70s
Put simply, for Spector and Kitsuse the objective (that is realist or materialist)
conditions of a social problem, if they do indeed exist, are irrelevance to proper
sociological analysis. Moreover, they go so far as to suggest that the inclusion ofobjective state of affairs in social problem analysis results is little more than a (return to)
functionalism (Spector & Kitsuse, 1973, p. 146). Hence they arrive at their, now famous,
definition of social problems we define social problems as the activities of
individuals or groups making assertions of grievance and claims with respect to some
putative condition. (Spector & Kitsuse, 1973, p. 146, original emphasis). Spector and
Kitsuse then, heralded the, now classical, definitional approach to the sociology of socialproblems. The were, and still are, social constructionists in that, for them, social
problems are constructed by the subjective attitudes, activities, meanings and approaches
that individuals (or groups) evince in the definition of, and work with, what they consider
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to be social problems. As Ibarra and Kitsuse (2003) put it The very concept socialproblem is itself problematic. (p. 19).
To summarize, the definitional, or social constructionist, position is, that all social
problems have a common sociology in that, in order to be a social problem, they must bedefined as such by subjective interests (again individuals or groups) called claims-
makers, and moreover these claims (about social problems) are often met with counter-claims, which is to say other individuals or groups which may well define, handle, or dealwith the social problem in question quite differently (in fact, in some cases denying that it
is a problem altogether). From this standpoint, a social problem is not an objective
(obvious if you will) condition of the world that everyone agrees on and is working to fix.
Rather it views social problems as constructed by would-be claims-makers and counterclaims-makers in an effort to not only deal with the problem, but in fact, from a
constructionist perspective, give it existence.
Controversy in Constructionist Views of Social Problems:
The definitional perspective of social problems, instantiated largely by Spector
and Kitsuse (1973), is, of course, not without its controversy. There is indeed another
perspective, though still constructionist, which takes issue with Spector and Kitsuse andthose who followed them. Best (1995; 2003b) has labelled Spector and Kitsuses version
of constructionism strict constructionism, in that their research method precludes any
reference to objective conditions. As previously mentioned, their focus is to analyize the
claims-makers and counter claims-makers that produce the definitions, discourse andwork of social problems. This is in contrast with what Best (1995; 2003b) calls
contextual constructionism. Contextual constructionism, while recognizing the
importance of the definitional aspects of social problems, that is claims-makers andcounter claims-makers, argues that there are some objective conditions to social problems
and moreover these can be used in sociological analysis. It is however, important to notethat this is not a regression to the previously mentioned value-conflict theory. Rather, it
is founded on constructionist assumptions, against for example nave realism or
materialism, however contextual constructionists posit that certain objective conditionsare important to social problems investigation and can therefore, albeit cautiously, be an
important element in sociological analysis:
Obviously, any discussion about social conditions is a social construction. Aclaim that crime (or fear of crime) is increasing is just that a claim. But calling
a statement a claim does not discredit it. Contextual constructionists argue that
any claim can be evaluated. A claim may be based on various sorts of evidence,
such as official criminal statistics or public opinion polls, which are in turn socialconstructions contextual constructionists assume that they can know with
reasonable confidence something about social [objective] conditions. (Best,
1995, p. 347-348)I have outlined three (sociological) ways of viewing social problems; 1) the traditional
(or mainstream) view, wherein social problems are simply problems in a given society
that require a solution, 2) definitional perspectives (or strict constructionism) which holdthat social problems can only be understood by examining those (individuals and/or
groups) who define, delineate, and work with social problems (there is no problem
without someone to label it as such), and 3) contextual constructivism, which suggest thatdefinitional perspectives are of great importance, however there are some objective (or
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actual) characteristics to the problem being defined which can also be a matter of study(yes people have to define a problem for it to exist, but that does not mean that such
definitional behaviour cannot be wrong).
Assuming Problems: Social Problems Theory and Nursing Education:
So what then can this aforementioned epistemological confusion, add to nursing
education? Although it is true that such confusion does not easily translate into a secureknowledge base for practice this is just the point I wish to make. What it does do fornursing students is to demonstrate that there is simply not a single way of
seeing/understanding the world we live (and practice) in. In effect, it prevents students
from assuming practice uncritically, or in this specific case assuming problems
uncritically. Such diversity of perspective is not only the case with social problems, butas well with gender (the multi-faceted nature of feminism), power, (for example Marx
against Foucault), class (Marx versus Weber), human agency (Giddens versus Archer),
social progress (critical theory versus postmodernism) and so on. As Toulmin (1990) putit, with reference to Lippman:
we may recall the comment on social and political affairs made by that
humane, grumpy, but normally clearheaded commentator, Walter Lippman, whichdistils much of what has come to light in our inquiry. To every human
problem, he said, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong; and that is
as true of intellectual as it is of practical problems. (p. 201)
Indeed, ignoring the complexity of the world we practice, or are going to practice, in forsome pseudo-certain knowledge from which to act (practice) is problematic, if not
dangerously dogmatic. And it surely does not make for a critical and emancipatory (read
higher) education.I hope that outlining the multiple perspectives of social problems theory has
provided a cogent example of how sociology might be of use in nursing education.Indeed, this overview of social problems theory, again I hope, assists me to make three
important points. First, social problems are not necessarily uncomplicated, self-referring
conditions that simply need fixing. Second, sociology as I have attempted to argue doeshave the emancipatory potential that Cooke called for in that, it provides for a complex
and multi-perspective view of a complex and multi-perspective world, and certainly one
that nursing students should have access to no less than researchers. And finally, it isdemocratic in that, it tends to be inclusive (accessing a diversity of voices, perspectives,
viewpoints, positions and possibilities) rather than a monolithic, and to be sure dogmatic,
understanding that is exclusive. This fact of reality is, or can be, confusing,
epistemologically, methodologically and pragmatically, however to ignore the confusionis, as I have mentioned several times, to risk dogmatic practice, as well as to, I think,
denigrate nursing students ability to be critically educated and still practice with
compassionate competence. Forgive the cumbersome way of putting it, but toproblematize problems is good for problems and as well, the individuals on both sides of
them (that is those afflicted and those who serve them).
Conclusion:
In this paper I have attempted to address the longstanding debate regarding the
usefulness and/or relevance of sociology to nursing. I have suggested that Hannah Cooke
(1993a) was correct when she began the debate by claiming that sociology can provide acritical and emancipatory agenda for nursing (education). More specifically, I have used
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social problems theory to make my point. After providing an overview of thesociological debate, I discussed the concept of assuming practice and the, little known in
many respects, history of social responsibility in nursing. Following this, I presented a
summary of the diverse perspectives of social problems and then discussed how this (asan example of sociological theory) can, and should, be applicable to nursing education.
Finally, I would like to conclude with a recent, and insightful, comment on nursingeducation from Watson and Thompson (2008). if university level education isrequired for other professionals then it is also required for nurses [and] if a proper
university level education is not offered to nurses then nurses should be educated
elsewhere. (p. 982). I submit that a proper university level education means, at least,
an education in sociological theory and methodology.
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