Exploring learning effectiveness for participant roles during healthcare simulation.

Nurse Educ Today

Biostatistician SigmaStats™ Consulting, LLC., SC, United States of America; Real World Evidence Strategy & Analytics ICON Commercialisation & Outcomes Services, North Wales, PA, United States of America. Electronic address:

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Universities are struggling to adequately prepare nursing students for the workforce, highlighting the need for effective teaching strategies in simulation learning.
  • The research aimed to compare the effectiveness of different roles—active participants versus observers—during nursing simulations.
  • The study found no significant differences in learning outcomes among the various participant roles, indicating that all roles may equally contribute to simulation effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Background: Universities face challenges in preparing future nurses for the workforce. It is essential to guide educators on strategies to achieve similar learning objectives to overcoming these challenges. Educators widely use the observer role in simulation, but researchers do not study the role thoroughly in current simulation research. There is a lack of discipline-specific research exploring how observers learn in simulation and if they can engage in the experiential learning intended in the simulation activity.

Objectives: The objective of this research is to determine the difference in simulation effectiveness between the process-based role versus the response-based role (observers) in participants during simulation-based learning experiences.

Design: This research used a quasi-experimental posttest only design to determine differences in simulation effectiveness among learner roles using the Simulation Effectiveness Tool-Modified (SET-M).

Setting & Participants: The researcher collected data from 193 prelicensure nursing students enrolled in any semester of one Midwestern undergraduate baccalaureate nursing program.

Methods: Nursing students completed the assigned face-to-face simulations in their current curriculum plan. Each participant was randomly assigned to a participant role: direct participant role as either a primary or secondary nurse, non-directed observer with no briefing or observer guide, direct observer with an observation guide, or in-scenario observer assigned to a non-clinical or other professional role within the scenario. After debriefing of the simulation, participants completed the demographic survey and SET-M.

Results: There were no significant differences found in prelicensure nursing students' simulation effectiveness among the four participant roles studied.

Conclusion: This study suggests simulation effectiveness (learning and confidence) happens regardless of the participants role during the simulation activity. Educators should consider what roles are necessary within each scenario and assign observation roles as needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2022.105561DOI Listing

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