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1.
Int J Nurs Educ Scholarsh ; 14(1)2017 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28343165

ABSTRACT

Background Essential nursing skills for safe practice are not limited to technical skills, but include abilities for determining salience among clinical data within dynamic practice environments, demonstrating clinical judgment and reasoning, problem-solving abilities, and teamwork competence. Effective instructional methods are needed to prepare new nurses for entry-to-practice in contemporary healthcare settings. Method This mixed-methods descriptive study explored self-reported perceptions of a process to self-record videos for psychomotor skill performance evaluation in a convenience sample of 102 pre-licensure students. Results Students reported gains in confidence and skill acquisition using team skills to record individual videos of skill performance, and described the importance of teamwork, peer support, and deliberate practice. Conclusion Although time consuming, the production of student-directed video validations of psychomotor skill performance is an authentic task with meaningful accountabilities that is well-received by students as an effective, satisfying learner experience to increase confidence and competence in performing psychomotor skills.


Subject(s)
Competency-Based Education/methods , Education, Nursing/methods , Psychomotor Performance , Videotape Recording , Clinical Competence , Female , Humans , Male , Nursing, Team/methods , Peer Review , Students, Nursing
2.
Nurs Adm Q ; 38(1): 55-61, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24317031

ABSTRACT

The Vietnam Nurse Project has been operating in Hanoi since 2007. Its primary purpose is to improve nursing education through curriculum development, faculty development, and the introduction of a more student-centric teaching and learning environment. The Virtual Nursing Grand Rounds component of the project is an academic-practice partnership between the Vietnam Nurse Project at the University of San Francisco School of Nursing and Health Professions and the Thanh Nhan Hospital intensive care unit. Its goal is to improve nursing practice in the Thanh Nhan Hospital intensive care unit. The Virtual Nursing Grand Rounds is a fully interactive real-time synchronous computer technology-assisted point-to-point program that provides ongoing evidence-based staff development and consultative services.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing/methods , Evidence-Based Nursing/education , Inventions , Teaching Rounds , Telemedicine/methods , Education, Nursing/organization & administration , Evidence-Based Nursing/methods , Humans , Internationality , Physician-Nurse Relations , Professional Autonomy , Staff Development , United States , Vietnam
3.
J Prof Nurs ; 28(2): 110-8, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22459141

ABSTRACT

Nurses in practice and students in training often fear hurting a patient or doing something wrong. Experienced nurses have developed assessment skills and clinical intuition to recognize and intervene to prevent patient risk and harm. Beginning nursing students have not yet had the opportunity to develop an awareness of patient risk, safety concerns, or a clear sense of their accountability in the nurse role as the primary advocate for patient safety. In this Safety Manifesto, the authors call for educators to critically review their prelicensure curricula for inclusion of teaching and learning activities that are focused on patient safety and offer recommendations for curricular changes with an emphasis on integration of instructional strategies that develop students' skills for clinical reasoning and judgment.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing , Licensure , Patients , Safety , Curriculum , Humans , Patient Advocacy
4.
J Prof Nurs ; 28(1): 48-61, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22261605

ABSTRACT

Responding to the growing concern about medical error and patient harm, nurse educators are seeking innovative strategies to ensure that nursing students develop the knowledge, skills, and attitudes that enable them to safely and effectively manage patient care. A nursing school and hospital affiliate engaged in a partnership to increase opportunities for students to acquire these competencies. The Synergy Partnership Model aligns agency safety and quality initiatives with the school's student outcome competencies. The partnership model establishes participant commitment, clarifies professional actions and accountabilities, and structures the integration of student learning with the clinical practice of agency nurses and physicians. A collection of evidence-based, best-practices resources provides students, faculties, and staff the tools to implement the partnership paradigm. A descriptive pilot study design with a convenience sample of students (N = 24) enrolled in a third-semester, prelicensure clinical nursing course measured students' safety and quality knowledge and the students' perceptions of team behaviors and communication effectiveness. Survey data reveal moderate to large effect sizes in gains for safety and quality knowledge and for students' increased confidence in their impact on patient care outcomes.


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Education, Nursing/organization & administration , Safety Management , Education, Nursing/standards , Humans , Medical Errors , Outcome Assessment, Health Care
5.
Nurse Educ ; 36(4): 144-9, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21670630

ABSTRACT

Deficiencies in procedural competency compromise patient safety and the quality of care provided. Educators in prelicensure nursing programs are challenged to design effective instruction to develop psychomotor skills abilities among novice learners. Highly contextualized learning and frequent opportunities for performance rehearsal promote knowledge retention and procedural competence. The author discusses data from an evaluation study that explored students' perceptions of the effectiveness of skills instruction and suggests strategies for curricular integration and effective instruction.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing/methods , Learning , Psychomotor Performance , Students, Nursing/psychology , Attitude of Health Personnel , Clinical Competence , Humans
6.
Nurse Educ Pract ; 8(2): 76-87, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18291324

ABSTRACT

Use of classroom response systems (a.k.a. "clickers" or "audience polling systems") are growing in popularity among faculty in colleges and universities. When used by faculty in a strategic instructional design, clickers can raise the level of participation and the effectiveness of interaction, promote engagement of students in active learning, foster communication to clarify misunderstanding and incorrect thinking, and provide a method to instructionally embed assessment as a learning activity rather than reliance on the traditional approach of summative assessment for assigning grades. This article describes the use of clicker technology in a baccalaureate nursing program to promote acquisition and application of advanced reasoning skills. Methods are suggested for embedding formative assessment and the tactical use of questioning as feedback and a powerful learning tool. Operational aspects of clickers technology are summarized and students' perceptions and satisfaction with use of this teaching and learning technology are described.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/methods , Educational Technology/instrumentation , Feedback , Learning , Students, Nursing/psychology , User-Computer Interface , Attitude to Computers , Computer-Assisted Instruction/instrumentation , Consumer Behavior , Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/organization & administration , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Judgment , Multimedia , Psychology, Educational , Schools, Nursing/organization & administration , Surveys and Questionnaires , Teaching/methods
7.
J Prof Nurs ; 19(3): 149-63, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12836145

ABSTRACT

This article describes a study designed to investigate graduate nursing students' satisfaction with a course taught via interactive video teleconferencing (IVT) and the World Wide Web/Internet (WWW/INT). A correlational research design examined the relationships among 5 learner attributes and 3 instructional variables and student satisfaction. Regression analyses identified learner attributes and instructional variables predictive of student satisfaction. Forty-three graduate nurse students were surveyed using a 59-item Student Satisfaction Survey (SSS). Learner attribute predictors included: (1) previous technology courses, (2) technology competence, (3) between-class technology usage, (4) age, and (5) remote-site group size. Instructional predictors were clustered into 3 dimensions: instructor/instruction, technology, and course management. Student satisfaction was a composite of overall satisfaction with the course and comparison with conventional classroom courses. Instructor/instruction explained 21 percent of the variance in course satisfaction scores. Overall instructor rating strongly correlated with satisfaction. The most potent finding was that good pedagogy is important to students' perceived satisfaction with distance education. Students acclimate to the instructional reality-traditional, campus-based face-to-face instruction, or technology-mediated distance education-and once accustomed, it is the quality and effectiveness of instructor and instruction, not the technology, that is associated with satisfaction. The findings of this study provide essential information to faculty responsible for the design and delivery of effective instruction and to students pursuing flexible and convenient options for advanced education.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Computer-Assisted Instruction/standards , Education, Distance/standards , Education, Nursing, Graduate/standards , Internet/standards , Students, Nursing/psychology , Telecommunications/standards , Adult , Attitude to Computers , California , Computer Literacy , Humans , Models, Educational , Needs Assessment , Nursing Education Research , Predictive Value of Tests , Program Evaluation , Regression Analysis , Systems Theory
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