Methods of Acquiring Knowledge - 1
Methods of Acquiring Knowledge - 1
Introduction
Knowledge is a complex, multifaceted concept.
Information sources for clinical practice vary in
dependability and validity. A brief discussion of some
alternative sources of evidence shows how research based
information is different.
Nursing has historically acquired knowledge through
traditions, authority, experience, borrowing, trial and error,
role modelling and mentorship, intuition, reasoning and
research.
Schematic Presentation
Diagrammatic Representation
Tradition
Advantages
It is efficient as an information source
Tradition or custom also facilitates communication by
providing a common foundation of accepted truth
Disadvantages
Tradition may interfere with the ability to perceive
alternatives
There is growing concern that many nursing interventions
are based on tradition , customs and “ unit culture” rather
than on sound evidence
Traditions are difficult to change because they have
existed for long periods of time and are frequently
supported by people with power and authority
Many traditions have not been evaluated or tested for
accuracy or efficiency
Traditions that have not been supported through research
tend to be persist
Authority
The term ‘ authority ‘ means ‘ a person or body with
special power ‘
An authority is a person with expertise and power who is
able to influence opinion and behaviour
There are authoritative people who will give decisions in
making judgment on an issue by virtue of specialized
training or experience where we had no direct experience
Knowledge acquired from authority is illustrated when one
person credits another person as the source of information
Nurses who publish articles and books or develop theories
are frequently considered authorities
An expert is only an authority when addressing his or her
area of expertise
Authorities in nursing must have both expertise and power
Disadvantages
Knowledge obtained from these authorities can be
inaccurate
Knowledge acquired from these authorities has frequently
not been validated and although it may be useful , it must
be verified through research
Experience
Limitations
Each individuals experience is fairly restricted
Another limitation of experience is that the same objective
event is usually experienced or perceived differently by
two individuals.
Borrowing
Disadvantages
Since disciplines share knowledge , it is sometimes
difficult to know where the boundaries exist between
nursing knowledge based and that of other disciplines
Borrowed knowledge has not been adequate for answering
many questions generated in nursing practice
Disadvantages
There is frequently no formal documentation of effective
and ineffective nursing actions
Using this strategy, knowledge is gained from experience
but it often not shared with others
The trial and error way of acquiring knowledge can also be
time consuming , because multiple interaction might be
implanted before one is found to be effective
There is also a risk of implementing nursing actions that
are detrimental to a patients health
This method is haphazard and the knowledge obtained is
often unrecorded and hence inaccessible in subsequent
clinical studies
Intuition
Reasoning
Problematic Reasoning
Problematic reasoning involves identifying a problem and the
factors influencing the problem, selecting solutions to the
problems and resolving the problem.
For eg: Nurses uses problematic reasoning in the nursing
process to identify nursing diagnosis and to implement nursing
interventions to resolve these problems.
Problematic reasoning is also evident in the identification
of a research problem
Operational Reasoning
Operational reasoning involves the identification and
discrimination between many alternatives or view points.
The focus is on the process ( debating alternatives ) rather
than on resolution
Nurses uses operational reasoning in developing realistic,
measurable goals with patients and families
Debating which measurement methods on data analysis
technique to use in a study requires operational thoughts
Dialectic Reasoning
Dialectic reasoning involves looking at situations in a
holistic way
A dialectic thinker believes that the whole is greater that
the sum of the parts and that the whole organizes the
parts
For eg: A nurse using dialectic reasoning would view a
patient as a person with strength and weakness who is
experiencing illness.
Dialectic reasoning also includes examining factors that
are opposite and making sense of them by merging them
in to single unit or idea , which is greater than either alone
Eg: Analyzing studies with conflicting findings and
summarizing these findings to determine the current
knowledge base for a research problem requires dialectic
reasoning
Logistic Reasoning
The aim of logistic is to determine truth or to explain and
predict phenomena
Logistic reasoning is used to break the whole into parts
and that can be carefully examined as can the relationship
among the parts
Logistic reasoning is the opposite of dialectic reasoning
A logistic reasoner assumes that the whole is the sum of
the parts and the part organize the whole
Logistic reasoning is uses frequently in research to select a
study design, plan and implement data collection and
select analysis technique
Eg: A patient states that she is cold and the nurse logically
examines the following parts and their relationships,
1) Room temperature
2) Patient temperature
3) Patients clothing
4) Patient activity
Reasoning is also classified by the discipline of logic into,
Inductive Bandman and Bandmann, 1988 ,
Chin &
Deductive Krawmer 1991
Inductive reasoning
It is the process of developing generations from specific
observations.
Eg: The nurse may observe the anxious behaviour of
( specific ) hospitalized children and conclude that ( in
general ) children’s separation from their parents is
stressful
Deductive Reasoning
It is the process of developing specific predictions from
general principles
Eg. If we assume that separation anxiety occurs in
hospitalized children ( in general ), then we might predict
that ( specific ) children in memorial Hospital whose
parents do not room-in will manifest symptoms of stress.
Advantages
Both systems of reasoning are useful as a means of
understanding and organizing phenomena and both play a role
in nursing research.
However reasoning in and of itself is limited because the
validity of reasoning depends on the accuracy of the
information with which one starts and reasoning may be an
insufficient basis for evaluating accuracy.
Conclusion
Reference