Student Perceptions Related to Immediate Workplace Usefulness of RN-to-BSN Program Content.

Nurse Educ

Author Affiliations: Professor (Dr Sitzman) and Clinical Assistant Professors (Mss Carpenter and Cherry), College of Nursing, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina.

Published: July 2021

Background: Despite a national directive for associate degree in nursing (ADN) nurses to complete BSN degrees, there is limited research related to student perceptions of the value added by BSN education.

Purpose: The purpose was to explore perceptions of immediate workplace usefulness of RN-to-BSN content for ADNs.

Methods: Qualitative narrative data provided by 263 RN-BSN students in their final semester before graduating with a BSN were analyzed. Students were asked, "How have you used what you are learning in the RN-BSN program at work?"

Results: Themes included the following: research and evidence-based practice, leadership, professionalism, communication, intentional holistic caring, critical thinking, cultural competence, safety and quality improvement, interdisciplinarity, population-based care, and fiscal awareness.

Conclusion: Results clarified content that students found useful and provided insight into specific benefits that employers might expect to see when ADNs complete BSN-level education.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NNE.0000000000000775DOI Listing

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