Title of article :
The design and implementation of an Interactive Computerised Decision Support Framework (ICDSF) as a strategy to improve nursing studentsʹ clinical reasoning skills
Author/Authors :
Hoffman، نويسنده , , Kerry and Dempsey، نويسنده , , Jennifer and Levett-Jones، نويسنده , , Tracy and Noble، نويسنده , , Danielle and Hickey، نويسنده , , Noelene and Jeong، نويسنده , , Sarah B. Hunter، نويسنده , , Sharyn and Norton، نويسنده , , Carol، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
8
From page :
587
To page :
594
Abstract :
Summary aper describes the conceptual design and testing of an Interactive Computerised Decision Support Framework (ICDSF) which was constructed to enable student nurses to “think like a nurse.” The ICDSF was based on a model of clinical reasoning. Teaching student nurses to reason clinically is important as poor clinical reasoning skills can lead to “failure-to rescue” of deteriorating patients. The framework of the ICDSF was based on nursing concepts to encourage deep learning and transferability of knowledge. The principles of active student participation, situated cognition to solve problems, authenticity, and cognitive rehearsal were used to develop the ICDSF. The ICDSF was designed in such a way that students moved through it in a step-wise fashion and were required to achieve competency at each step before proceeding to the next. The quality of the ICDSF was evaluated using a questionairre survey, studentsʹ written comments and student assessment measures on a pilot and the ICDSF. Overall students were highly satisfied with the clinical scenarios of the ICDSF and believed they were an interesting and useful way to engage in authentic clinical learning. They also believed the ICDSF was useful in developing cognitive skills such as clinical reasoning, problem-solving and decision-making. Some reported issues were the need for good technical support and the lack of face to face contact when using e-learning. Some students also believed the ICDSF was less useful than actual clinical placements.
Keywords :
Computerised case studies , Clinical reasoning model , E-LEARNING , Constructivist learning
Journal title :
Nurse Education Today
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Nurse Education Today
Record number :
1876287
Link To Document :
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