Title of article
Novices in clinical practice settings: Student nurses stories of learning the practice of nursing
Author/Authors
Lily Orland-Barak، نويسنده , , Lily and Wilhelem، نويسنده , , Dalit، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
10
From page
455
To page
464
Abstract
Summary
g on 24 stories of clinical practice in an apprenticeship context of training in Israel, this qualitative study examined student nurses’ perspectives towards learning to become a nurse, as revealed through the language and content of their written stories of clinical practice. As our findings suggest, student nurses’ stories of learning to become a nurse in practice settings, are characterized by procedural language, by medical rather than nursing terminology, and by a focus on actions rather than on interactions. We have learned that, despite the rich content that characterizes clinical practice settings, the apprenticeship orientation of the training program, combined with student nurses’ state of being a novice, yielded representations of the experience of learning to nurse which were characterized by an instrumental perspective towards the practice. We interpret these findings through four interrelated insights that emerge from the study: (1) an ‘instrumental practice’ orientation in the setting of caring, (2) knowledge of clinical facts-not knowledge of clinical principles, (3) the fragmented character of novices’ learning to nurse in practice, and (4) rich content of practice alone does not yield rich content of learning.
Keywords
Nursing students , Experience of learning , Novice-expert
Journal title
Nurse Education Today
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Nurse Education Today
Record number
1874230
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