scholarly journals Renewal of an entry to practice baccalaureate nursing curriculum: Adapting to complexity

2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Mary Fetherston ◽  
Caroline Browne ◽  
Prue Andrus ◽  
Sharryn Batt

Curriculum re-design in entry to practice nursing degrees requires a rigorous and multifaceted approach to align the needs of students, professional and industry stakeholders, community needs, the faculty’s vision and university and regulator requirements. This paper relates the initial steps in the process taken to achieve this re-design in one Australian university’s Bachelor of Nursing program, and describes our experiences in two parts. The first part outlines the context in which the need for curriculum renewal was triggered and the ensuing processes undertaken in the development of our new course aim, course outcomes and graduate attributes. The second part discusses how undertaking these activities then came to influence the adoption of Complexity Thinking in the design of our conceptual model, which then guided our program structure and overarching learning and teaching approaches. We share these experiences to illustrate the steps we undertook on this journey, to outline and example the program we created, and to continue the scholarly discussions around the design of baccalaureate nursing program structures, especially those that implement pedagogies inspired by the concepts related to Complexity Theory. The choice of complexity thinking as a guiding theory was key in providing the lens through which we were inspired to graduate nurses with the skills to provide care in complex situations and value the learning that comes through uncertainty, reflection, adaptation and emergence.

Author(s):  
Linda A Ritchie ◽  
Marilyn Evans ◽  
Melanie MacNeil ◽  
Sandra Micsinszki

In 2000, one Canadian university began offering a 12-month baccalaureate program to provide registered nurses (RNs) with a condensed program to expedite baccalaureate preparation. The paucity of current literature regarding returning RNs’ experiences emphasized the need to explore these students’ perceptions regarding their educational experiences. Twelve participants were interviewed for this descriptive/exploratory study. A major theme of "surviving" emerged from the qualitative analysis. Surviving embraced the themes of "the quest", "the struggle", and "the aftermath". Implications for nursing curriculum and program development and recommendations for research are discussed.


1992 ◽  
Vol 31 (9) ◽  
pp. 403-408
Author(s):  
Andrew C Mills ◽  
Mary E Sampel ◽  
Vivian C Pohlman ◽  
Ann M Becker

1989 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 415-421 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald C. Feldt ◽  
James Marie Donahue

The study involved prediction of GPA in a nursing program and NCLEX-RN licensure score following completion of the program. The sample included 155 students who completed and 34 who failed to complete a baccalaureate nursing program for the 1984–1986 years. The best set of predictors of nursing GPA included ACT composite score, anatomy grade, and chemistry grade, R = .73. The best set of predictors of NCLEX-RN included ACT composite score, high school percentile rank, nursing GPA, and chemistry grade, R = .68. Classification of withdrawn and completing groups and also pass and fail NCLEX-RN performance via discriminant analysis provided results comparable to those of previous research; however, residual analysis indicated very large residuals for those withdrawing from the program as well as those who failed the licensure exam. An alternative to discriminant analysis for classifying students is suggested.


1997 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 56
Author(s):  
Judith Clare ◽  
Susan Mann ◽  
Charmaine Power ◽  
Tess Byrnes ◽  
Ailsa n'ha Winifreyda

An innovative project which aims to balance acute care and community health care in the clinical experience for students in a generic baccalaureate nursing program, is outlined. The ways in which nurses in community practice and academia can work together to ensure that primary health care (PHC) becomes a philosophy used for guiding nursing practice, is demonstrated. The aims of the project are to gather sufficient information on which to base curricula change to the undergraduate baccalaureate nursing program, as well as to assess the employment outcomes for this group of graduate nurses. The paper sets the context for the project by providing a brief historical review that highlights the relevance and necessity of PHC as a framework for nursing. The ways in which nurses in community practice and nurses in academia can work together to ensure that primary health care (PHC) becomes a philosophy used for guiding nursing practice is discussed. Through an innovative partnership between the School of Nursing, Flinders University of South Australia (FUSA) and Noarlunga Health Services, curriculum changes ensure that nursing students experience a balance of theory and practice in both the community and acute clinical fields, and that the curriculum is underpinned by PHC philosophy and principles.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsay Domiano

Schools of nursing (SON) must meet the challenges of producing safe, competent practitioners. Educators are constantly trying to identify predictors of program completion and National Council Licensure Examination–Registered Nurses (NCLEX-RN®) success, as well as variables that put students at risk for failure. The purpose of this study was to determine common variables among students from a baccalaureate-nursing program who were unsuccessful in the nursing program or on the NCLEX-RN®. This cross sectional research study utilized a retrospective correlational design to discover the relationships between independent variables of degree and cumulative GPAs, specific courses repeated, number of repeated courses and whether the student had full-time or part-time clinical faculty members and the independent variables program non-completion and NCLEX-RN® failure. The theoretical underpinning that guided this study was Bandura’s Social-Cognitive Theory of Self-Efficacy. Data analyses were conducted using a series of crosstabulations with chi-square analysis and t-tests. The research questions were investigated using binary logistic regressions. The relationship between repeated chemistry courses and NCLEX-RN® examination success was significant. Relationships between repeated English, math, chemistry and other science courses and nursing program failure were significant. Cumulative GPAs were significantly lower for all groups analyzed. Two binary logistic regression analyses were conducted to determine variables that would predict students who failed to complete the program or failed the NCLEX-RN®. Overall both models were significant. Results may be utilized to modify admission requirements and admit students that have a higher probability of being successful in the nursing program and on the NCLEX-RN®.


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