Title of article
Tracking students through program entry, progression, graduation, and licensure: Assessing undergraduate nursing student retention and success
Author/Authors
Jeffreys، نويسنده , , Marianne R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
14
From page
406
To page
419
Abstract
Summary
escalating nursing shortage, nursing student retention and success (graduation and licensure) is a priority. The entry, progression, graduation, and licensure characteristics of culturally diverse associate degree nursing students (n = 112) were assessed to gain insight into nursing student progress and success. In this retrospective study, data collection included student profile characteristics, academic outcomes, type of retention or attrition, program completion length, and licensure. The retention trajectory was distributed between ideal (26%), continuous (24%), and interim/stopout (25%). Attrition consisted of first semester failure (9%), voluntary (14%), and involuntary (2%). Descriptive and inferential analyses suggested several variables that influenced first time pass rate on the nurse licensing exam: course grades in three nursing courses, number of nursing withdrawals or failures (W/F), and nursing course grade average (NCGA). Implications for nurse educators are discussed.
Keywords
Nursing student attrition , Nurse licensure , Nursing education , Nursing student retention
Journal title
Nurse Education Today
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Nurse Education Today
Record number
1874675
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