Abstract
Objective:
to analyze whether the tutor's use of reflexive strategies encourages the students to reflect. The goal is to discover what type of strategies can help to achieve this and how tutors and students behave in the practical context.
Method:
a qualitative and ethnographic focus was adopted. Twenty-seven students and 15 tutors from three health centers participated. The latter had received specific training on reflexive clinical tutoring. The analysis was developed through constant comparisons of the categories.
Results:
the results demonstrate that the tutors' use of reflexive strategies such as didactic questioning, didactic empathy and pedagogical silence contributes to encourage the students' reflection and significant learning.
Conclusions:
reflexive practice is key to tutors' training and students' learning.
Descriptors:
Education, Nursing; Preceptorship; Education, Higher; Learning; Clinical Clerkship; Concept Formation