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Towards better teaching about the subluxation complex

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 09:06 authored by Phillip Ebrall
Inspired by a visit to Disneyland this paper explores the challenges associated with the need to teach something that may not exist. It reports lessons learned by viewing a successful commercial illusion that has capacity to inform a pedagogical approach to abstract objects. I use two reports of experiential narrative to identify a teaching methodology that may be applicable to those who similarly teach something for which existence and actuality is difficult to prove in a quantitative sense. In each example an abstract object appears to have real dimensions and even though the abstract object or thing may not exist I attempt to show how we can come to understand that it does exist through a structured process using true statements that can describe various elements of the object. This process provides a linguistic meaning for an embodied experience that is believed relevant and helpful to advancing our collective understanding of the scholarship of learning and teaching about the chiropractic subluxation complex.

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    ISSN - Is published in 10360913

Journal

Chiropractic Journal of Australia

Volume

39

Issue

4

Start page

165

End page

170

Total pages

6

Publisher

Chiropractors Association of Australian National

Place published

Wagga Wagga, Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2009 Chiropractors Association of Australian National Ltd

Former Identifier

2006024862

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-07-06

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