Caring from the Graduate Student Perspective

1997 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 32-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Arnold

This paper focuses on the nature of caring from the perspective of graduate nursing students enrolled in a graduate core nursing theory course. It describes student perspectives of caring derived from a two part learning exercise designed to introduce students to inductive thinking processes employed in nursing theory development. The graduate students identified the essence of caring as a special form of ‘being with’ a patient encompassing giving of self, involved presence, intuitive knowing, and support for the integrity of the patient. Nursing actions associated with caring include making time, active listening, touch, and advocacy with competence as an underlying dimension of caring actions. Attitudes deemed essential to the development of caring incorporate creativity, recognizing limitations, and respect for the uniqueness and humanity of a suffering individual. That caring has benefits for the caregiver as well as the patient finds voice in student descriptions of the effects of caring as a source of professional validation, and a transformational turning-point their perceptions of themselves as caregivers.

2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 144-146
Author(s):  
Pamela Coombs Delis

The theory of humanbecoming can be illuminated through utilizing popular literature as a situation study. The living experience of Morrie Schwartz as related in Tuesdays with Morrie, serves as exemplar for lingering presence, the emerging now, and the three themes of meaning, rhythmicity, and transcendence. This exemplar formed the basis for an educational session for graduate nursing students in a nursing theory course. The response to this teaching methodology suggests popular literature can be used successfully in teaching nursing theory.


Author(s):  
Sharon Ann Cumbie ◽  
R. L. Wolverton

Nursing must respond to complex health care needs, but the response will be ineffective without cohesiveness within the nursing community. Advance practice nursing students’ exploration of the historical, philosophical, and theoretical structures of nursing can provide an anchor for study of the discipline, promote a feeling of connection with the community of nursing, and foster an understanding of the wisdom that exists within the body of nursing knowledge. The authors have developed and refined a structure and approach for teaching an online nursing theory course to promote students’ identification with nursing knowledge and facilitate building a sense of community among the class members and with the discipline, as a whole. The purposes of this article are to describe this model for community building within a master’s-level online graduate nursing theory course and to demonstrate student responses to the course process.


Author(s):  
Peggy Ward-Smith ◽  
Carol Schmer ◽  
Jane Peterson ◽  
Carolyn Hart

2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Bonham ◽  
Erin L. Federspiel ◽  
Benita Randolph ◽  
Dustie L. Barnett

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