scholarly journals Performance of Clinical Nurse Educators in Teaching Pharmacology and Medication Management: Nursing Students’ Perceptions

2016 ◽  
Vol Inpress (Inpress) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zohre Ghamari Zare ◽  
Mohsen Adib-Hajbaghery
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Eileen Creel ◽  
Ann Carruth ◽  
Staci Taylor

Supervised clinical training is an essential component of nursing education programs. There has been little written about the impact of transitioning from the pre-digital healthcare environment to electronic medication management on the clinical education of nursing students. Even less is known about how nursing faculty and students incorporate technologies such a bar code medication administration into workflow to ensure correct medication administration. This article reports the results of a national descriptive cross-sectional survey of Associate and Bachelor of Science Nursing programs. Findings from this study confirm that despite the benefits of safety technologies, current practices in many clinical agencies create new challenges for nurse educators who supervise nursing students, potentially resulting in medication errors and false documentation. Nursing students in a clinical setting need to administer medications to become proficient and safe, and access to these technologies is essential. To ensure patient safety standards and legal compliance, clinical training site agencies need policies to define acceptable workflows while providing students with the practical experience needed to achieve skill competence.


Author(s):  
Carmen V. Harrison

AbstractObjectivesNovice nurses are struggling to exercise the critical thinking skill set needed to make competent clinical decisions in today’s complex health care environment. This poses immense threats to the health and safety of patients. To address this alarming concern, many prominent organizations have called for a widespread overhaul of nursing curricula.MethodsA consistent theme among the recommendations for revising nursing curricula is the utilization of innovative curricula designs that focus on enhancing the critical thinking ability of nursing students, such as a concept-based curriculum.ResultsPlanning and implementing a curriculum revision is an overwhelming undertaking.ConclusionsProviding nurse educators with a guide on how to transition to a concept-based curriculum may help to facilitate a course revision.


Author(s):  
Lynn Malinsky ◽  
Ruth DuBois ◽  
Diane Jacquest

Institutional ethnography can be viewed as a method of inquiry for nurse educators to build scholarship capacity and advance the quality of nursing practice. Within a framework of the Boyer (1990) model and the domains of academic scholarship in nursing described by the Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing (2006), we discuss how a team of nurse educators participated as co-researchers in an institutional ethnographic study to examine the routine work of evaluating nursing students and discovered a contradiction between what was actually happening and what we value as nurse educators. The discovery, teaching, application, and integration dimensions of scholarship are examined for links to our emerging insights from the research and ramifications for our teaching practices. The article illuminates the expertise that developed and the transformations that happened as results of a collaborative institutional ethnography.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nesreen AbuAssi ◽  
Hanan Alkorashy

Self-directed learning and other prevalent learning styles are important aspects of nursing education because they help nurse educators to predict differences in learners’ needs, abilities, and interests. Moreover, nurse educators depend on these predictors when they choose the most suitable teaching strategies, which enable them to manage adult learners effectively. This study’s objective is to explore the relationship between learning styles and the willingness to adopt self-directed learning among nursing students in King Saud University (KSU). Using a cross-sectional descriptive correlational design, the study was conducted with 230 undergraduate nursing students (female and male) from the third to eighth academic levels at the College of Nursing at KSU, Saudi Arabia. Kolb’s learning styles inventory and the self-directed learning readiness scale were adopted to determine the effects of the self-directed learning approach. The study’s findings suggested that the majority of nursing students had a “Diverging” style of learning. The “self-control” subscale was used to determine the willingness for self-directed learning. It recorded the highest mean score compared to the subscales of “self-management” and “desire for learning.” However, no statistically significant association was found between learning styles and self-directed learning readiness. Additionally, the findings showed that the majority of the students who participated in this study had little interest in the self-directed learning approach. Thus, this study recommends that the nursing faculty needs to assess students for their preferred learning style and readiness for self-directed learning before and throughout the students’ enrollment in the college. Further, the nursing faculty should apply a variety of teaching methods to manage students’ learning needs effectively.


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 61-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leena Salminen ◽  
Jenni Rinne ◽  
Minna Stolt ◽  
Helena Leino-Kilpi

2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
pp. 67
Author(s):  
Leighsa Sharoff

Objective and rationale: Comparison of self-perceived genetic-genomic knowledge of nurse educators and graduate degree nursing students enrolled at a large diverse urban university in the US. Comfort level in performing genetic-genomic related tasks and its perceived relevance to nursing also explored. Practicing clinicians are expected to have Genetics and Genomics (G-G) knowledge to provide care to a client and their family with a genetic condition and faculty expected to be able to educate these practitioners.Methods: Two groups of participants asked to complete identical survey instrument, Genetics/Genomics Literacy Assessment (GGLA). Data was collected from September 2014-December 2015. Deans/Directors from university’s nursing programs (N = 17) sent introductory email with survey link and asked to forward to their faculty. APRN/DNP students at one of the university’s graduate programs sent email with survey link.Results: Fifty-three nurse educators and thirty-six graduate degree nursing students completed survey. Comparison of categorical data revealed nurse educators perceived G-G knowledge correlated to graduate degree students. Majority of participants demonstrated significantly lower correct percentages (< 55%) correct] to survey questions. Majority of participants (> 75%) attitude agree it is important for nurses to know this content and be able to teach this material. However, majority (> 75%) were not comfortable with teaching or explaining this material.Conclusions: Nurse educators need to be knowledgeable in order to educate their students who are expected to practice at advanced efficiency. A prepared nursing workforce is crucial for the translation of G-G integration into personalized precision healthcare.


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