Nurse Educator Perceptions of Workplace Collegiality.

Nurse Educ

Assistant Professor (Dr S. G. Davis) and Professor (Dr Kintz), Linfield University School of Nursing, Portland, Oregon; Integration Specialist Nurse Educator (Dr E. Davis), Ascend Learning, Leawood, Kansas; and Assistant Professor (Dr Opsahl), Indiana University School of Nursing-Bloomington.

Published: August 2022

Background: The nursing faculty shortage challenges nursing educators, administrators, and staff to find innovative ways to understand and address faculty retention.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine nurse educators' perceptions of workplace collegiality and the possible correlation to role satisfaction and role persistence.

Methods: Participants (n = 177) were recruited nationally from a Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education accredited schools listing. Three survey instruments were utilized: Survey of Collegial Communication, Job Satisfaction Survey, and Michigan Organizational Assessment Questionnaire.

Results: The study found a positive relationship between collegiality and job satisfaction in academia. The Pearson correlation results indicated there was a significant negative correlation between the intent to remain and collegiality.

Conclusion: The findings suggest nursing educators perceive collegiality as an important component of job satisfaction and intent to remain.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NNE.0000000000001194DOI Listing

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