Evaluation of a Secure Laptop-Based Testing Program in an Undergraduate Nursing Program: Students' Perspective.

Comput Inform Nurs

Author Affiliations: Center for Educational Technology (Dr Tao), Adventist University of Health Sciences, Orlando, Florida; Department of Educational and Human Science, University of Central Florida, Orlando (Dr Gunter); Department of Technological and Vocational Education, National Taipei University of Technology, Taiwan (Dr Tsai); and Center for Educational Technology, Adventist University of Health Sciences, Orlando, Florida (Dr Lim).

Published: January 2016

Recently, the many robust learning management systems, and the availability of affordable laptops, have made secure laptop-based testing a reality on many campuses. The undergraduate nursing program at the authors' university began to implement a secure laptop-based testing program in 2009, which allowed students to use their newly purchased laptops to take quizzes and tests securely in classrooms. After nearly 5 years' secure laptop-based testing program implementation, a formative evaluation, using a mixed method that has both descriptive and correlational data elements, was conducted to seek constructive feedback from students to improve the program. Evaluation data show that, overall, students (n = 166) believed the secure laptop-based testing program helps them get hands-on experience of taking examinations on the computer and gets them prepared for their computerized NCLEX-RN. Students, however, had a lot of concerns about laptop glitches and campus wireless network glitches they experienced during testing. At the same time, NCLEX-RN first-time passing rate data were analyzed using the χ2 test, and revealed no significant association between the two testing methods (paper-and-pencil testing and the secure laptop-based testing) and students' first-time NCLEX-RN passing rate. Based on the odds ratio, however, the odds of students passing NCLEX-RN the first time was 1.37 times higher if they were taught with the secure laptop-based testing method than if taught with the traditional paper-and-pencil testing method in nursing school. It was recommended to the institution that better quality of laptops needs to be provided to future students, measures needed to be taken to further stabilize the campus wireless Internet network, and there was a need to reevaluate the Laptop Initiative Program.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CIN.0000000000000184DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

secure laptop-based
28
laptop-based testing
28
testing program
16
testing
11
program
8
undergraduate nursing
8
nursing program
8
campus wireless
8
passing rate
8
paper-and-pencil testing
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!