DUNMORE, Pa. – Meaningful, compassionate communication can be challenging under the most mundane of circumstances. And, as many know all too well, it can be especially difficult during a health crisis.
Mindful of that disconnect, Penn State Scranton Associate Professor of English Kelley Wagers set out to create an innovative course that gives students across the academic spectrum the opportunity to explore and practice these vital exchanges.
During the fall semester Wagers taught, for the second time, Communicating Care, an integrative (i.e. multidisciplinary) general-education course she designed with input from a medical ethics expert at Penn State College of Medicine and some campus colleagues.
Essentially, Communicating Care is a medical humanities course, perfect for those going into nursing or another medical field, but also for anyone who wants to become a more effective and empathetic communicator, said Wagers. Students have the option of taking it as an english, sociology, or communication arts and sciences course.
Throughout the fall semester, students enrolled in the course studied literary texts and social science studies and theories that allowed them to think critically about what Wagers calls “performances of care.”
In addition, two guest speakers visited the class via Zoom – Michael Evans, assistant dean for undergraduate nursing education at the Commonwealth Campuses and associate teaching professor in nursing, and Susan J. Loeb, professor of nursing at Penn State College of Nursing and College of Medicine. And, for further perspective, Wagers gave students the opportunity to virtually attend Penn State Abington’s Health Humanities Symposium and Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine’s Webinar Series on Healthcare, Humanities and Social Justice.
Student response to the course has been very encouraging, said Wagers, noting it was a particularly good time to offer it given the wide-ranging effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The idea is that everybody acts as a care provider and a care recipient in their lives, so we can study and improve our abilities to communicate in these encounters,” Wagers said. “I think we're used to seeing firm lines — not just between the humanities and sciences, but also between academic study and ‘real life,’ and between experts and students. Everything about this course is designed to help us see that those divisions are false and to find out how much more we can do when we see connection and overlap instead. I think creating opportunities for that kind of integration is really helpful for the students.”