Evaluating Health Mobile Apps: Information Literacy in Undergraduate and Graduate Nursing Courses

2016 ◽  
Vol 55 (8) ◽  
pp. 480-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paula McNiel ◽  
Erin C. McArthur
2020 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 1063-1072
Author(s):  
Maria Pinto ◽  
David Caballero ◽  
Dora Sales ◽  
Rosaura Fernández-Pascual

This paper aims at reflecting on the process of developing and validating a scale for measuring the students’ attitudes and perceptions regarding the use of mobile technologies in the teaching-learning of information competencies (MOBILE-APPS). Validation was carried out by administering the questionnaire to a pilot group of students, selected from Education degree, with a rubric to analyse the quality/coherence, clarity and usefulness of the content. The questionnaire was then piloted with a larger sample of students. To analyse the tool’s reliability and internal validity, scale validation techniques and exploratory factorial analysis were used. The resulting questionnaire, MOBILE-APPS, is a simple yet effective scale for collecting information. It can be applied in a number of university settings and degrees to ascertain student attitudes and perceptions of mobile information literacy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 73 (suppl 6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ester Mascarenhas Oliveira ◽  
Jeane Freitas de Oliveira ◽  
Cleuma Sueli Santos Suto ◽  
Carle Porcino ◽  
Sara Peixoto de Almeida Brandão ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Objectives: to learn and analyze the structure of nurses’ social representations about transvestite people. Methods: a qualitative research based on the Theory of Social Representations, with 110 nurses enrolled in Graduate Nursing courses, who answered the Free-Association Test, with the stimulus ‘transvestite’. Data were processed by the software Ensemble de Programmes Permettant I’ Analysedes Évocations. Results: in the central nucleus, the term “prejudice” was the most evoked, followed by “homosexual”, “identity” and “female-make-up”. Social representation is anchored in the social organization in which transvestite people are still seen and/or associated with homosexuals who make up and assume an identity, without being seen and/or understood as they really are. Final Considerations: although prejudice is noteworthy as a central element, terms present in the peripheral system reveal that the group recognizes transvestites as a person with rights, which can translate into health care practices.


1998 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Me Lebold, ◽  
Margaret Re Douglas,

Caring is at the center of nursing. Nevertheless, nurses seek to learn more about the meanings and common practices of caring as well as how to teach and enhance these practices. This article describes undergraduate and graduate nursing courses in caring that the authors developed and taught for more than eight years. Course foundations, organizational themes, structural patterns, and teaching strategies are presented. A phenomenological worldview that is consistent with Diekelmann’s “Concernful Practices of Teaching and Learning” undergirds course design. Emphasis is given to personal, aesthetic, ethical, and spiritual patterns of knowing and being, although empirical patterns are included. The structure of the courses focuses sequentially on care of self, care of others, and the creation of caring communities. Each class session is organized to include opportunities for reflection, lecture, discussion, and experiential exercises. Various expressions and interpretations of caring such as story, play, meditation, music, literature, and other art forms are used as teaching strategies. Journal writing is done regularly to encourage the habit of reflective practice.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Travis L. Wagner ◽  
Ashley Blewer

Abstract It is near-impossible for casual consumers of images to authenticate digitally-altered images without a keen understanding of how to “read” the digital image. As Photoshop did for photographic alteration, so to have advances in artificial intelligence and computer graphics made seamless video alteration seem real to the untrained eye. The colloquialism used to describe these videos are “deepfakes”: a portmanteau of deep learning AI and faked imagery. The implications for these videos serving as authentic representations matters, especially in rhetorics around “fake news.” Yet, this alteration software, one deployable both through high-end editing software and free mobile apps, remains critically under examined. One troubling example of deepfakes is the superimposing of women’s faces into pornographic videos. The implication here is a reification of women’s bodies as a thing to be visually consumed, here circumventing consent. This use is confounding considering the very bodies used to perfect deepfakes were men. This paper explores how the emergence and distribution of deepfakes continues to enforce gendered disparities within visual information. This paper, however, rejects the inevitability of deepfakes arguing that feminist oriented approaches to artificial intelligence building and a critical approaches to visual information literacy can stifle the distribution of violently sexist deepfakes.


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