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The focus of this book is on functional seating, and the key
argument presented is that functional seating needs to assist the
person using it for the performance of seated tasks, enhance rather
than detract from the person's posture and health, and it needs to
provide aesthetic features that do not limit task or health. The
book spans the period 3000BC to 2000AD and presents largely Western
seating. This book is unique in its approach to seating because it
draws together evidence that relates to seating that facilitates
health and task while also addressing aesthetic factors. This
evidence creates an understanding of how seats may be designed to
not only promote bodily health but also allow functional
optimisation of sitting and seating. This book is important to
furniture and industrial designers, interior decorators,
architects, those teaching seat design, health professionals
attending and educating those who relax or work in the seated
position, furniture historians, and members of the general public
interested in the history of seating.
It provides the reader with a contemporary review examining the
notion of practice knowledge gained from professional experience
and its relationship to professional practice expertise. It is
divided into four sections: the first broadly examines the nature
and forms of knowledge and the relationships between knowledge and
practice; the second considers the nature of professional
expertise; the third explores these principles in action and the
fourth looks at future developments. An essential purchase for all
students, educators, researchers and practitioners of
physiotherapy, occupational therapy, nursing and indeed all those
in the health sciences field. An essential purchase for all
students, educators, researchers and practitioners of
physiotherapy, occupational therapy, nursing and indeed all those
in the health sciences field. * Brings the modern practitioner
completely up to date with trends and developments in the field *
Relates theoretical examples to professional practice * Explores
how professional knowledge and expertise can be developed
Clinical reasoning lies at the core of health care practice and
education. Clinical Reasoning in the Health Professions, therefore,
occupies a central place in the education of health professionals,
the enhancement of professional decision making of individuals and
groups of practitioners with their clients, and research into
optimal practice reasoning. Key themes presented: Clinical
reasoning as a composite of encultured capabilities Clinical
reasoning embedded within situated practice including the wider
socio-economic and political contexts, the practitioner's and the
client's contexts, and shared goals such as promoting health
communities The importance of narratives, language and culture in
clinical decision making Changing reasoning practices linked to
increasing autonomy of practitioners working without the
requirement of medical referrals Clinical reasoning as an
increasingly team-based practice, including shared decision making
with clients The need for sound strategies and tools to facilitate
the expanding collaborations in health care across disciplines and
with clients and carers Advanced education approaches promoting
expansion and enhancement of reasoning strategies The importance of
building good practices for learning clinical reasoning into
curricula and into students' own practice development approaches
Strengthening links between orthodox and complementary medicine
reasoning practices New to this edition: All chapters updated and
20 new chapters added Concrete examples, cases and vignettes were
added to bring discussions to life for the reader Reflection points
strategically placed to assist readers to extend their insights and
build learning from their own practical experiences and theoretical
knowledge Devices of particular value to reflective practitioners
and educators. This is a book for teachers and learners,
practitioners, practice leaders, researchers and curriculum
managers. Indeed, it is a valuable resource for educators seeking
to ground their teaching practices in educational theory, sound
knowledge of clinical reasoning and practice-based evidence, and
researchers seeking to expand their research horizons. All chapters
updated and 20 new chapters added Concrete examples, cases and
vignettes were added to bring discussions to life for the reader
Reflection points strategically placed to assist readers to extend
their insights and build learning from their own practical
experiences and theoretical knowledge Devices of particular value
to reflective practitioners and educators.
This book provides comprehensive coverage of the key issues and
perspectives in the current practice of physiotherapy, focussing on
the issues that are not taught in 'clinical' texts yet that
underpin professional practice. The book helps students gain a good
understanding of the physiotherapy profession. It will introduce
students to the key practice issues included in professional entry
curricula: history of the profession, the workforce and roles of
physiotherapists, ethics, law, reflective practice, clinical
reasoning, teamwork, and other professional issues within the field
of physiotherapy.
Education for Future Practice engages with the challenge faced by
higher education: to envisage probable, possible and desired
futures for practice and education and to realise ways of educating
practitioners for these futures. Future education involves the
pursuit of shared visions and purpose in the midst of the
turbulence created by a diverse influences on education and
practice. These influences arise from: learners' participation in
multiple practice and learning communities, unpredictable
workplaces, dynamic education and practice market places, the
various demands and interests of stakeholders, higher education
imperatives, and unparalleled opportunities and expectations
associated with advancing information and communication
technologies. The book contains four sections: Education for
practice Contextualising practice Contextualising education for
practice Doing education for practice This book is directed to
educators, scholars, practitioners and those concerned with how we
are preparing people to work in the rapidly changing world of the
twenty first century.
We are poised at a crossroads between a past that is outgrown and a
future we must choose. This book examines the multiple ways that
wisdom, grounded in life experience, science and theoretical
knowledge, can contribute to positive and sustainable local and
global futures. The authors in this book have brought their
thinking to various aspects of this existential challenge using the
lenses of Wisdom and Wise Practice, in an effort to explore ideas
by which society might make choices in planning and acting for a
wiser future. Wisdom practices have developed over millennia to
assist people in approaching and managing life experiences and
difficulties. While such practices were originally considered the
purview of academic and religious scholars; at this important time
in history, it must become everyone's responsibility to wisely look
ahead if we are to achieve a sustainable future for society. The
authors of this book comprise international future-oriented
leaders, scholars, practitioners, community members and
commentators with a commitment to social justice, human service and
development. The book explores the place of wisdom and wise living
practices alongside other ways of knowing and acting, for shaping
positive futures for people and the world we inhabit. The chapters
examine major challenges across political, physical and social life
worlds, aiming to promote a quantum shift in discourse and decision
making to address current and future challenges. The four parts of
the book follow forward thinking ideas of wise professional
practice: * Facing future challenges, * Exploring practice
pathways, * Examining options and * Future possibilities.
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