Collaborative Caring Science Curriculum Structure and Design: Transcending Reductionistic Models

2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-156
Author(s):  
Claire Mallette ◽  
Mary Packard ◽  
Claudia Grobbel ◽  
Donald Rose

With ongoing technological advancement and the introduction of robotics within healthcare, debates related to the future of nursing and the role of nursing education are paramount. While these advancements can be viewed as the next wave of technology, it becomes more urgent than ever to ground nursing curricula in caring science. The robot revolution has generated a window of opportunity for nursing education to lead curricula change with the focus becoming on the space created at the convergence of nurse, technology, and the persons entrusted to our care.


2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 62-65
Author(s):  
Bethany Correlli, ◽  
Rosie Hanneke,

Nursing faculty at Notre Dame of Maryland University and librarians at Loyola/Notre Dame Library have partnered to strengthen the caring science curriculum through the incorporation of information literacy instruction in the RN-to-BSN program. In this article, the authors explain how partnering to teach information literacy empowers students toward autonomy as they become active participants in the learning process. The authors’ reflections align with Hills and Watson’s (2011) 3 major elements of caring relationships–collaboration, power/empowerment, and participation–which are used as a framework to demonstrate this partnership.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 23
Author(s):  
Diane Wise ◽  
Jenny B. Schuessler ◽  
Lourdes Cody ◽  
Deborah Davison

Introduction: Based on Duffy’s (2009) Quality Caring Model and Hill and Watson’s Caring Science Curriculum Model (2011), the School of Nursing embraces the philosophy that caring collaborative relationships are the center of a culture of quality caring in nursing. Culture and cultural competence are integral to caring. Immersion experiences have been identified as impacting cultural competence (Bentley & Ellison, 2007; Kohlbry, 2016; Larsen & Reif, 2011; Long, 2012). Methodology: This paper describes the planning, implementation and lessons learned from an immersion experience as part of a mission focused study abroad course to Quito, Ecuador. Discussion: Twelve students, three faculty, and two nurse practitioners cared for approximately 100 patients per day for 10 days. Lessons learned related to faculty, students and logistics are discussed. Results: Students demonstrated positive outcomes related to critical thinking and clinical reasoning, holistic care of diverse populations, communication and collaboration, professional accountability, and effective teaching strategies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcia Hills ◽  
Jean Watson ◽  
Chantal Cara

2013 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 67-76
Author(s):  
Carey S. Clark,

With the knowledge of psychoneuroimmunological responses and the stress of nursing students, as caring nurse educators, we have become ethically obligated to revise and re-vision our current nursing educational practices. Nurse educators should be motivated to create innovative caring-science curricular approaches, so that our nurses of the future are in turn supported in creating caring-healing sustainable practices (Watson, 2008). This paper details the outcomes from an RN-BSN program that implemented an integral-caring-holistic-science curriculum design in order to support students on their own healing journey. The program supported nurses in their ability to create caring-healing moments and spaces for patients, implement change in the workplace, and avoid the perils of burn-out related to low stress resilience, which is so common within the nursing profession (Clark, 2010; 2006; 2003).


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