those activities (ANMC‚ 2009). For more information on reflective practice see Melanie Jasper’s‚ Beginning Reflective Practice – Foundations in Nursing & Health Care‚ 2003 and for a suitable framework to use see Borton’s Developmental Framework for Reflection (see page 2). The following activities are some examples of CPD: Reflecting on feedback‚ keeping a practice journal Acting as a preceptor / mentor / tutor Participating on accreditation‚ audit or quality improvement committees Undertaking supervised
Premium Midwifery Home birth Nurse
This page intentionally left blank A Course in Financial Calculus A Course in Financial Calculus Alison Etheridge University of Oxford CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge‚ New York‚ Melbourne‚ Madrid‚ Cape Town‚ Singapore‚ São Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building‚ Cambridge CB2 8RU‚ UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press‚ New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521890779 © Cambridge University
Premium Call option Put option Option
Article Review: Are you a Good boss or a great one? By Linda A. Hill and Kent Lineback Submitted by Dominic Jenks Leadership & Management Development‚ Module 2 – 17th September 2012 Summary In summary Hill and Lineback outlined in this article why the majority of managers will remain as a good boss. Hill and Lineback explained their views / ideas on how they believe a manager can become a great boss using the 3 main imperatives on becoming a great boss; manage yourself‚ manage your network
Premium Management Goal Reflections
In the case of Wernicke’s production‚ the mirror stands as the main motive always as its background. It has different meanings for this production. As I already mentioned‚ the mirror background reflects the different images of Vienna‚ singers on the stage and the audience. At the first scene‚ the mirror is directed forward and reflects the stage and the audience. But soon later‚ it turns inside and reflects the image of historical red bedroom of the Marschallin on it. At the end of the first act
Premium Light Performance Optics
Individual Learning Plan: Part 2 When you first took the Disposition Survey for Individual Learning Plan (ILP) in your ePortfolio: Transition Point 2‚ you were at the beginning of your MSED specialization program. Your reflection on your knowledge and skills was a snapshot in time. Your Individual Learning Plan was constructed based on your interpretation of your ratings and your perception of your level of implementation in the areas of Professional Dispositions‚ National Board for Professional
Premium Learning Writing Understanding
entries of shops and guesthouses (1900 to 1920) with its reflective glass Windows/frames‚ the photographer has created a reality where the interior and exterior look merge into each other‚ and ghostly faces appear in sight and combine with the reflections of the surrounding buildings. However the series of photographs where the surrealists more pored is his second series of photographs of shop Windows (from 1920)‚ the modern Paris picture‚ where the passage of time is particularly visible (as compared
Premium Dimension Reflection City
action” meaning that they can gain insight both during a new encounter from their previous experiences and also by analysing an event after it has occurred. (Wang‚ E.E.‚ 2011) With this in mind‚ we as educators should facilitate learners to begin reflection not just after‚ but also during and before a teaching scenario begins. For a training session that involves communication I would encourage a discussion between students beforehand to reflect on instances
Premium Psychology Reflection Learning
“Mirror” by Sylvia Plath is a poem narrated from the perspective of a mirror. Within this poem‚ there is a clash between truth and perception. This idea is first presented through the form of the stanzas where the mirror is “silver and exact” (Plath 1) then when the mirror is “now [...] a lake” (10). The poem then illustrates how even the truthful mirror has preconceptions. Then finally how the woman‚ who comes every morning to look in the mirror often deludes herself with “those liars‚ the candles
Premium Truth Sylvia Plath Reflection
Reflective report This reflective report has been structured following Gibbs’ (1988) model. Gibbs’ model provides an iterative model of reflection which I am going to use to answer a series of ordered questions: the answer to each question leads onto the next stage of the reflective cycle. Description I will be discussing an incident that occurred while I was on duty in a nursing home where I work as a healthcare assistant. A nurse confronted a carer in an unprofessional manner during handover
Premium Critical thinking Fundamental physics concepts Philosophy of science
Reflection on Hemingway’s “In Another Country” [pic]While reading Ernest Hemingway’s “In Another Country‚” I was impressed with the unique viewpoint taken in the story. Not only is the point of view of a soldier‚ it is also a perspective of a man who is out of place even with men of his own kind who have been wounded just as the narrator had been. The idea that the narrator really has no one whom he can truly relate to emphasizes the rather gloomy mood of the story: “I was a friend‚ but I was never
Premium Ernest Hemingway English-language films Reflection