Current Search: Nursing--Study and teaching Associate degree (x)
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- Title
- CRITICAL CARE COMPONENT OF UNDERGRADUATE NURSING EDUCATION: A STUDY OF PERCEPTIONS OF ASSOCIATE DEGREE AND BACCALAUREATE DEGREE NURSING FACULTY AND STUDENTS.
- Creator
- BLAIS, KATHLEEN KOERNIG, Florida Atlantic University, Burgess, Ernest E.
- Abstract/Description
-
This study compared the perceptions of Associate (ADN) and Baccalaureate (BSN) nursing faculty and students regarding undergraduate critical care nursing education. The purposes were to: 1) identify attitudes and beliefs of ADN and BSN nursing faculty and students regarding undergraduate critical care nursing education; 2) explore the extent to which faculty perceptions differ in relation to student perceptions; 3) explore the extent to which faculty perceptions differ in relation to the...
Show moreThis study compared the perceptions of Associate (ADN) and Baccalaureate (BSN) nursing faculty and students regarding undergraduate critical care nursing education. The purposes were to: 1) identify attitudes and beliefs of ADN and BSN nursing faculty and students regarding undergraduate critical care nursing education; 2) explore the extent to which faculty perceptions differ in relation to student perceptions; 3) explore the extent to which faculty perceptions differ in relation to the types of program in which they are teaching; 4) explore the extent to which faculty perceptions differ in relation to their demographic and biographic characteristics; and 5) explore the extent to which student perceptions differ in relation to students in the alternative program of study. The Critical Care Nursing Education Questionnaire, was developed for use in this study by the investigator and administered to 50 Associate and Baccalaureate nursing faculty and 211 Associate and Baccalaureate nursing students. Descriptive and inferential statistical procedures were used to analyze the group responses. Significant differences were identified by ANOVA testing of the eight null hypotheses and led to rejection of four null hypotheses at the .05 level of significance. Perceptions of faculty regarding undergraduate critical care nursing education include: 1> instruction should be offered at the baccalaureate level of undergraduate nursing education; 2) students should be permitted to perform critical care nursing procedures under the guidance of a critical care nurse or nursing instructor; 3) such instruction should be general in nature, offered over one full semester with between 48 and 96 hours of clinical experience; 4) instruction should be an elective available to all senior students; 5) the intensive care unit is not threatening for students, rather undergraduate critical care nursing education helps students gain confidence in their basic nursing skills; and 6) upon graduation, students should not be expected to function as practitioners of critical care nursing. Students were in stronger agreement with such instruction being required in all undergraduate nursing programs. Baccalaureate students were more likely to believe that upon graduation the nurse should have the knowledge and skill to function as a beginning practitioner of critical care nursing. All faculty and students indicated that undergraduate exposure to critical care nursing is important.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1985
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/11860
- Subject Headings
- Nursing--Study and teaching (Associate degree), Intensive care nursing--Study and teaching
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Predicting success in the associate degree nursing program.
- Creator
- Crouch, Suzanne Johnson., Florida Atlantic University, Kerensky, Vasil M.
- Abstract/Description
-
Admission criteria for the selection of students are determined by educational institutions. Presently, no objective instrument is used consistently as a predictor of successful nursing program completion (Haglund, 1978). The nursing department in the community college in this study utilizes the prerequisite college grade point average and the National League for Nursing pre-admission test for admission into the school of nursing. Admission into the associate degree nursing program is based...
Show moreAdmission criteria for the selection of students are determined by educational institutions. Presently, no objective instrument is used consistently as a predictor of successful nursing program completion (Haglund, 1978). The nursing department in the community college in this study utilizes the prerequisite college grade point average and the National League for Nursing pre-admission test for admission into the school of nursing. Admission into the associate degree nursing program is based solely on these two criteria. The purpose of this study was to assess the merit of the Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal as a pre-admission criterion in conjunction with the currently utilized admission criteria of the college prerequisite grade point average and the National League of Nursing pre-admission test. The research question of this study was: Can the Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal be utilized along with the college prerequisite grade point average and the National League for Nursing pre-admission test in a prediction formula for success in the Associate Degree Nursing Program? Data were collected from 192 associate degree nursing students. The setting was a community college in southeastern Florida that is currently accredited by the National League for Nursing. The subjects completed the Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal at the beginning of the associate degree program. Data from students' records revealed the college prerequisite grade point average and the National League for Nursing pre-admission test scores. A discriminant analysis was computed to determine the significance of the prediction formula of Y1 = c + b1 X + b2 X2+ b3 X3. The dependent variable was the nursing grade point average. The independent variables were the Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal; the college prerequisite grade point average; and the National League for Nursing pre-admission test score (F = 14.847; df = 191; p < .001). The predictor variables of college prerequisite grade point average, National League for Nursing pre-admission test score, and the Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal score were significant in predicting success in the associate degree nursing program as measured by the dependent variable nursing grade point average. The prediction formula as a whole had a significance level p < .001, thereby rejecting the null hypothesis.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1999
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12615
- Subject Headings
- Nursing--Study and teaching (Associate degree), Prediction of scholastic success, Critical thinking
- Format
- Document (PDF)