Background: Service user involvement (SUI) in educating healthcare professionals in higher education can help student nurses develop a compassionate approach to care practice. This article explains one university's initiative, the Patient as Coach Team (PaCT), and presents evaluation results from phase 1. The PaCT strategy involved a service user led session and with student nurses, in small groups, sharing experiences of care from a service user perspective. Aim: To evaluate nursing students' views of the PaCT session, involving service users in their teaching and learning. Design: Survey. Method: Structured questionnaires with a free text box were completed by student nurses (n=321). Structured question responses were analysed manually and free text data thematically. Data collection took place from June 2016-June 2017. Results: There were very positive responses to the survey questions, with students perceiving a positive impact on their learning. Five themes emerged from the students' free text responses: 'Usefulness of the session', 'Seeing patients' perspectives', 'Inspiring and motivating session', 'Good discussions with patient coach', and 'overall views about the PaCT session'. Conclusion: The PaCT session provides a valid learning strategy utilising coaching as a technique to enable student nurses to learn from service users' experiences and perspectives of care. In addition, it contributes to students' reflective practice about their individual professional practice in care settings.