What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement

As the pedagogy of health care simulation matures, the level of guidance provided and types of simulation components included increasingly vary. To prepare students for professional practice, one university embedded Tanner’s model of clinical judgment within the nursing curricula and integrated simu...

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Main Authors: Kelly, Michelle, Hager, P., Gallagher, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: McGraw-Hill 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/17089
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author Kelly, Michelle
Hager, P.
Gallagher, R.
author_facet Kelly, Michelle
Hager, P.
Gallagher, R.
author_sort Kelly, Michelle
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description As the pedagogy of health care simulation matures, the level of guidance provided and types of simulation components included increasingly vary. To prepare students for professional practice, one university embedded Tanner’s model of clinical judgment within the nursing curricula and integrated simulations. There was interest in seeking students’ opinions of “what matters most” in the design and delivery of simulations, which may vary from the academic’s viewpoint. Senior undergraduate nursing students (N = 150) from three types of study programs rated 11 simulation components in relation to clinical judgment. The three student groups rated all components above 2.9 on a 5-point Likert scale, with some variation across groups for component rankings. The highest ranking components for applying clinical judgment were facilitated debriefing, postsimulation reflection, and guidance by the academic. The lowest ranked components were patient case notes and briefing and orientation to the simulation area. Age and previous nursing experience did not influence the study variables.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-170892017-09-13T15:43:29Z What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement Kelly, Michelle Hager, P. Gallagher, R. As the pedagogy of health care simulation matures, the level of guidance provided and types of simulation components included increasingly vary. To prepare students for professional practice, one university embedded Tanner’s model of clinical judgment within the nursing curricula and integrated simulations. There was interest in seeking students’ opinions of “what matters most” in the design and delivery of simulations, which may vary from the academic’s viewpoint. Senior undergraduate nursing students (N = 150) from three types of study programs rated 11 simulation components in relation to clinical judgment. The three student groups rated all components above 2.9 on a 5-point Likert scale, with some variation across groups for component rankings. The highest ranking components for applying clinical judgment were facilitated debriefing, postsimulation reflection, and guidance by the academic. The lowest ranked components were patient case notes and briefing and orientation to the simulation area. Age and previous nursing experience did not influence the study variables. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/17089 10.3928/01484834-20140122-08 McGraw-Hill fulltext
spellingShingle Kelly, Michelle
Hager, P.
Gallagher, R.
What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement
title What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement
title_full What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement
title_fullStr What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement
title_full_unstemmed What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement
title_short What matters most? Students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement
title_sort what matters most? students' rankings of simulation components which contribute to clinical judgement
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/17089