This qualitative study investigates the subject of Clinical
Communication and how it is taught, learned and practised in one London
Medical School and Hospital. It is informed by theoretical perspectives
from workplace learning. Teachers and medical students took part in a
series of interviews and ward observations over a period of four months.
Teachers were interviewed about their teaching practice, they were asked
to observe students in the clinical workplace and finally were asked to
reflect upon whether these observations had informed their teaching
practice. Students were interviewed about how they had learned and
subsequently practised clinical communication in the clinical workplace.
Conceptually, this research shifts focus to the clinical workplace as
the legitimate location for teaching and learning clinical communication
and proposes a new and expanded way of understanding learning in this
context.