Publications by authors named "Nicole de Bosch Kemper"

At one mid-sized research-intensive university in Western Canada, the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) program recently underwent significant curriculum revisions (Epp et al., 2021). A constructivist approach was adopted to create opportunities for students to align knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSA) with prior learning to build a deeper understanding (Vygotsky, 1978).

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In response to increasingly complex care environments, a mid-sized research-intensive university in Western Canada engaged in an extensive curriculum redesign of the BSN program, including the development of an Innovative Clinical Learning Model. In this article, the authors share their experience of developing and implementing two innovative pedagogical approaches for clinical teaching in the medical surgical context. Program evaluation data indicated that these pedagogical strategies provided increased opportunities for timely application of theory in practice and facilitated students' development of clinical reasoning, skill mastery, and professional identities as accountable, responsible, ethical nurses.

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To effectively navigate today's complex and rapidly changing health care environments, nurses require a high level of knowledge, sound psychomotor skills, diverse thinking and reasoning abilities, and a strong professional identity. The evidence showed that programs that offer students focused clinical practice experiences and offer students opportunities to 'think like a nurse' enable them to become sound practitioners. Faculty and staff at one mid-sized research-intensive university in Western Canada, engaged in an iterative process of rethinking the theoretical and pedagogical underpinnings of a BSN curriculum for educating nurses for the complexity of today's practice.

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