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Toward a Moral Horizon: APPENDIX 8-1

Toward a Moral Horizon
APPENDIX 8-1
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table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. List of Tables
  6. List of Figures
  7. Indigenous Voices on the Moral and Ethical Horizon of the Land: A Contextualized Land Acknowledgement
  8. Foreword
  9. About the Editors
  10. About the Contributors
  11. Acknowledgements
  12. Introduction The Moral Terrain
  13. Section 1 Mapping the Moral Climate for Health Care and Nursing Ethics
    1. Chapter 1 Nursing Ethics: Developing a Moral Compass for Leadership
      1. Appendix 1-1
      2. Appendix 1-2
      3. Appendix 1-3
    2. Chapter 2 Research Ethics and Canadian Nursing: An Evolving Landscape
      1. Appendix 2-1
    3. Chapter 3 Building on Values: Ethics in Health Care in Canada
    4. Chapter 4 Exploring Public Health Ethics: Social Justice, Solidarity, and the Common Good
      1. Appendix 4-1
    5. Chapter 5 Indigenous Nurse Perspectives: Ethical Realities
    6. Chapter 6 Nurses and Health Care Providers as Moral Agents: From Moral Distress to Moral Action
    7. Chapter 7 Ethical Leadership at the Interface of the Nursing Profession, Organizations, and Health Care Systems
  14. Section 2 Pursuing Equity in Diverse Populations
    1. Chapter 8 Becoming a Transformative Nurse Educator: Untangling Ethics in Nursing Education
      1. Appendix 8-1
    2. Chapter 9 Promoting Health Equity in Nursing Practice: Challenges and Opportunities
    3. Chapter 10 Addressing Structural Inequities: Ethical Challenges in Mental Health Care
      1. Appendix 10-1
    4. Chapter 11 Health Equity, Reproductive Justice, and Relational Autonomy: Ethical Nursing Care for Childbearing Individuals and Families
    5. Chapter 12 Listening Authentically to Young People’s Voices: A Conception of the Moral Agency of Children
    6. Chapter 13 Home Health Care: Ethics, Politics, and Policy
    7. Chapter 14 The Ethics of Caring for People with Disabilities
    8. Chapter 15 Care of Older Adults: The Crises, the Challenges, and the Clarion Calls for Change
    9. Chapter 16 Traversing Landscapes of Dying and Grief: A Palliative Care Ethic for Nursing at the End of Life
  15. Section 3 Navigating Horizons for Health Care and Nursing Ethics
    1. Chapter 17 Genetics and Identity: Ethical Considerations in Practice, Policy, and Research
    2. Chapter 18 Promises and Perils of Digital Health Technologies
    3. Chapter 19 Opening Pandora’s Box: The Ethics of Xenotransplantation—A Biotechnology Exemplar
    4. Chapter 20 Becoming a Global Community: It’s a Small World After All
    5. Conclusion Going Boldly Forward: Toward a Moral Horizon

APPENDIX 8-1 | Toward a Moral Horizon | Open Scholarship

APPENDIX 8-1

Individual Reflective Exercise

IT IS IMPORTANT TO REFLECT ON VALUES about teaching, learning, leadership, and context, and to make connections between values and the theoretical frameworks that guide practice. One tool that readers might find helpful is Pratt and Collins’s (2000a, 2000b) Teaching Perspectives Inventory (TPI). Reflecting on the TPI enables a focus on teachers’ beliefs, intentions, and actions, and can be an insightful way for educators to learn about themselves as teachers. Below is a reflective exercise that you can use to consider the varying components of your practice.

At times, you may find it challenging to name the theoretical underpinnings of your practice. It may be helpful to consider Hartrick Doane and Varcoe’s (2015) view that practice is never atheoretical. And even though you may not be conscious of the foundational underpinnings of how you engage in teaching, taking time to think about it will serve you well.

Please take a moment to (1) complete the TPI (http://www.teachingperspectives.com/tpi/) and (2) reflect on the values, theories, concepts, and frameworks (pedagogical, ethical, relational) that guide your everyday teaching practice. Once you have identified and analyzed them, note them in your educator toolbox (refer to Figure 8-1-1). Be as creative as you would like to be—write, draw, paint, doodle.

FIGURE 8-1-1

An Educator Toolbox

Figure 8-1-1 An Educator Toolbox

REFLECTIVE QUESTIONS

Now that you have completed your reflections and TPI, ask yourself the following questions:

1. What was the experience like for me?

2. What surprised me about either exercise?

3. How has the exercise affected my thinking about teaching and learning?

4. What does it mean for me as a nursing educator and/or leader now and in the future?

Annotate

Next Chapter
Chapter 9 Promoting Health Equity in Nursing Practice: Challenges and Opportunities
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This publication, unless otherwise indicated, is released under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License. This means that you may copy, redistribute, remix, transform or build upon the material for non- commercial purposes only. Distribution of derivative works must be made under an identical license that governs the original work. Properly attribute the book as follows: Starzomski, R., Storch, J. L., & Rodney, P. (Eds.). (2023). Toward a Moral Horizon: Nursing Ethics for Leadership and Practice. Victoria, BC: University of Victoria Libraries. https://doi.org/10.18357/9781550587128 This work is licensed under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted. Download this book at https://dspace.library.uvic.ca/handle/1828/3853
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