Home Away from Home: How Undergraduate and Graduate Students Experience Space and Place in a new Health Sciences Building

Author:

LeGrow Karen1,Espin Sherry1,Chui Lois2ORCID,Rose Don1,Meldrum Richard3,Sharpe Mary4,Gucciardi Enza5

Affiliation:

1. Daphne Cockwell School of Nursing, Faculty of Community Services, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, Canada

2. McMaster Children’s Hospital, Faculty of Community Services, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, Canada

3. School of Occupational and Public Health, Faculty of Community Services, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, Canada

4. School of Midwifery, Faculty of Community Services, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, Canada

5. School of Nutrition, Faculty of Community Services, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON, Canada

Abstract

Buildings contribute in crucial ways to how students experience learning spaces. Four schools within a faculty (nursing, nutrition, occupational and public health, and midwifery) moved into a new Health Sciences building Fall of 2019. This new building created a unique opportunity to explore the intersection between higher education and learning space design, informed by concepts of space and place, and students’ profession specific and interprofessional learning experiences in a new Health Sciences building. A qualitative descriptive design was used. All undergraduate and graduate students within the four schools were invited to participate. Focus groups were undertaken to gain a rich understanding of students’ experiences and views of their space and place of learning. Data collection involved focus group data from profession specific participant users and interprofessional participant users. Inductive thematic analysis of focus group transcripts generated an initial coding scheme, key themes, and data patterns. Codes were sorted into categories and then organized into meaningful clusters. A building planning development project document relating to the vision, intentions, design, and planning for the new building provided content from which to view the study findings. The study data contributed to the conversation about space and place and its influence on higher learning within specific intraprofessional and interprofessional student groups and provided insight into the process of actualizing a vision for a new learning space and the resultant experiences and perceptions of students within that space/place.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Nursing

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