The Fijian Diploma of Nursing curriculum : an indigenous case study of a curriculum change : a thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing at Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

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Date
2011
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Massey University
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This thesis explores an educational change process in Fiji and used a case study methodology to examine the introduction of the 2004 Diploma of Nursing programme in the Fiji School of Nursing. The three-year competency based curriculum was developed and funded by the Australian government through the Fiji Health Sector Improvement Project (FHSIP) with limited participation of the local teachers at the Fiji School of Nursing. Many problems beset the programme, beginning with its rushed implementation at the end of an academic year and the incompleteness of the curriculum document. Teachers questioned the quality and nature of the competency based curriculum, and the absence of many supportive networks and resources to facilitate curriculum change. The majority of the staff did not understand the competency-based nature of the curriculum and its requirements. Using the vanua indigenous research framework and Fullan’s educational change theory to guide and inform the case study, qualitative methods of data collection and analysis were employed, including documentary analysis, participant observations and interviews. Talanoa, a culturally appropriate method of data collection for Pasifika people was used in both individual and group interviews. The research found indigenous nurses continue to be colonised and made to reproduce western ideologies and nursing values, perpetuated by the use of external educational aid and expertise. The execution of the curriculum project and the decision-making flowed from the Ministry of Health down to the Fiji School of Nursing, without consultation with the school’s staff, reflecting the former colonial administration where such a top-down approach was acceptable. Neo-colonialism is therefore regarded as the dominant paradigm where indigenous nursing leaders emulated the dominant behaviour of their former colonisers on their fellow indigenous subordinates. Moreover, it is argued here that foreign-influenced curricula continued to produce nurses who are not adequately prepared to care for the indigenous Fijians, and contributed to the attrition of Fijian nurses to countries whose values underpin the curriculum.
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Educational change, Nursing education, Post-colonialism, Neo-colonialism, Western ideologies
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