The Embodied Experience and Transformative Learning: Moving Towards a Healthy and Empowered Self
Date
2018-09
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Abstract
Using a qualitative single case study methodology, this study explored whether and how individuals find an empowered sense of themselves through their bodies and physical experiences. Five participants underwent 6 weeks of physical activity, with each week focusing on a different aspect of self-care. Research data were gathered through pre- and post-assessments, a 6-week questionnaire, and semi-structured interviews. Five themes emerged for the first sub-question (“What enhances or promotes embodied learning, which can then help one find an empowered sense of self?”): (a) curiosity and a willingness to learn, (b) reflection, (c) examination for personal improvement, (d) support, and (e) character strengths. Four qualities were found from the analysis of the second sub-question (“What role does the human body serve in transformational learning?”): (a) thoughtfulness, (b) personal acknowledgement, (c) health and wholeness, and (d) the affirmation of oneself. The participants’ experiences suggest that their engagement in the study had a positive impact on self-care, sense of self, and perspective change. The results provide insights for ongoing discussion into the role of embodied learning and its connection to overarching themes within transformative learning, which are disorienting dilemmas, reflection, and discourse. These findings contribute to the growing body of research in transformational learning by providing ideas for new conceptions for practice and by bringing attention back to the physical body as a source of learning and transformation.
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Keywords
embodied learning, Transformative Learning, physical activity, self-care
Citation
Iafrate, M. (2018). The Embodied Experience and Transformative Learning: Moving Towards a Healthy and Empowered Self (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/33065