Introduction: A common focus in many studies, in the short-term perspective, is to evaluate students' workplace learning and its outcome. However, the outcome can be perceived differently depending on when it was evaluated. The aim of this study was to explore student nurses' learning activities in an acute internal medicine unit and the nurses perceived learning outcome in a long-term perspective.
Material And Methods: Repetitive ethnographic observations were performed in an internal medicine care unit at a teaching hospital in Sweden between 2011 and 2013. Four student nurses and supervisors were repetitively observed. Two years later retrospective interviews were performed with four nurses who had performed workplace learning, as students, in this unit during the observation period. An inductive comparative analysis involving all interviews and observational data was applied.
Results: Three themes were identified: To handle shifting situations - illustrating how student nurses learnt to adapt to shifting situations, to manage stress, to create structure and space for learning and to deal with hierarchies; To build relationships - illustrating how student nurses learnt to collaborate and to interact with patients; To act independently - illustrating how student nurses trained to act independently in the unit, took responsibility, and prioritized in this complex context.
Conclusion: Learning activities in a complex acute medical unit setting were characterized by a high workload and frequent stressful situations, and a demand on students to interact, to take responsibility, and to prioritize. To learn in such a stressful context, have in a long-term perspective, a potential to develop students' embodied understanding of and in practice, making them more prepared to work and independently apply their nursing expertise in similar contexts as graduated nurses.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6971285 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/AMEP.S230476 | DOI Listing |
J Educ Health Promot
November 2024
Department of Biostatistics, National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
Background: Agile methodology (AM) is an innovative, active, project-based learning method. The scrum is a popular agile framework widely used in project management and education. This study evaluates the opinions on agile adaptation in nursing curricula among nursing students to identify how AM can be applied in higher education to facilitate learning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Educ Health Promot
November 2024
Higher Institute of Nursing Professions and Techniques of Health of Fez, Fez, Morocco.
Background: Psychological flourishing is a component of positive mental health that characterizes the lives of nursing and health technology students, despite the stressful situations they experience during this training. The objective of this study is to evaluate psychological flourishing and to put the thumb on its importance in the training of nursing and health technique students.
Materials And Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive-analytical study was conducted at the two higher institutes of nursing and health technical professions in Fez and Rabat between 1 March and 30 March 2022, using a questionnaire containing socio-demographic characteristics, training characteristics, a perceived stress scale (PSS10) and a psychological flourishing scale.
Nurse Educ
October 2024
Author Affiliation: Department of Nursing, Nebraska Wesleyan University, Lincoln, Nebraska (Dr Eilts).
Background: Promoting the success and retention of novice nursing students requires a better understanding of how self-regulated and strategic learning approaches impact academic performance.
Purpose: The purpose of this correlational study was to determine if there was a predictive relationship between the results of a self-regulated learning assessment and final grades in a foundational nursing course.
Methods: The Learning and Study Strategies Inventory (LASSI) was used to collect data from a convenience sample of 75 students enrolled in an entry-level nursing course across 4 prelicensure programs.
Nurse Educ
November 2024
By Jennifer Marsh, MSN, RN, Boise State University School of Nursing, Boise, Idaho,
Int J Ment Health Nurs
February 2025
University of Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Internationally, the need to have service user involvement (the 'voice' of recovery journeys) as an established and significant feature on the landscape of professional development has been widely discussed in the area of mental health nursing (MHN) education for over a decade. Service user involvement contributes to a different understanding, bringing 'new' ways of knowing in nursing education and potentially new ways of practicing within mental health services. The objective of this co-produced research was to investigate the current local 'state of play' of service user involvement in MHN student education in a regional university in the Republic of Ireland.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!