0
Article   |    
AFFECTIVE LEARNING AND THE STUDENT-TEACHER RELATIONSHIP
SAMUEL R. WARSON
Am J Psychiatry 1949;106:53-58.
View Article Information
The Department of Neuropsychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine.
text A A A
PDF of the full text article.
Abstract
Psychiatry has been challenged to contribute to a solution for pressing social problems. The direction of this contribution can be made through the field of education. The medical school provides a good laboratory for the study of the learning process that leads to acceptable and constructive social values. This involves affective learning, and psychiatric understanding can contribute to the development of techniques for teaching in this area.In a teaching situation which was highly charged emotionally it was found that the use of group and individual psychotherapeutic approaches resulted in a high incidence of validated evidence of successful affective learning. It was also found that there is a close parallel between the student-teacher and the patient-physician relationship, and between the learning and the psychotherapeutic processes. It was obvious that the mechanisms of identification and transfer of attitudes, which are so important in this type of learning, are facilitated by the setting up of a therapeutic milieu. This would indicate that the teacher should have a therapeutic orientation in addition to the other qualifications mentioned by Whitehorn(5).The student-teacher relationship can be a therapeutic one and should be, when emotionally determined attitudes prejudice the learning process. The awareness of the teacher of the students' need for a special kind of relationship in such situations has an obvious application in the whole field of education. Psychiatry can do much in helping the teacher become aware of the emotional factors involved by setting up teaching programs within the educational systems that will allow the teacher to have the experience that brings about this awareness.Abstract Teaser
Figures in this Article

    Your Session has timed out. Please sign back in to continue.
    Sign In Your Session has timed out. Please sign back in to continue.
    Sign In to Access Full Content
     
    Username
    Password
    Sign in via Athens (What is this?)
    Athens is a service for single sign-on which enables access to all of an institution's subscriptions on- or off-site.
    Not a subscriber?

    Subscribe Now/Learn More

    PsychiatryOnline subscription options offer access to the DSM-IV-TR® library, books, journals, CME, and patient resources. This all-in-one virtual library provides psychiatrists and mental health professionals with key resources for diagnosis, treatment, research, and professional development.

    Need more help? PsychiatryOnline Customer Service may be reached by emailing PsychiatryOnline@psych.org or by calling 800-368-5777 (in the U.S.) or 703-907-7322 (outside the U.S.).

    +
    +
    +

    CME Activity

    There is currently no quiz available for this resource. Please click here to go to the CME page to find another.
    Submit a Comments
    Please read the other comments before you post yours. Contributors must reveal any conflict of interest.
    Comments are moderated and will appear on the site at the discertion of JBJS editorial staff.

    * = Required Field
    (if multiple authors, separate names by comma)
    Example: John Doe



    Related Content
    Articles
    Books
    The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Substance Abuse Treatment, 4th Edition > Chapter 47.  >
    Psychiatric News
    PubMed Articles
    A piece of my mind. Tall buildings.
    JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2011 Nov 16