University of Tasmania
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Student nurse perceptions of video simulation and critical reflection for developing clinical reasoning skills: A cross cohort study

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Version 2 2024-11-21, 01:00
Version 1 2023-05-20, 23:18
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-21, 01:00 authored by MJ Macartney, Pathmavathy NamasivayamPathmavathy Namasivayam, John CooperJohn Cooper

Clinical-reasoning (CR) provides a framework for higher-order critical thinking that fosters a nurse’s ability to assess, process and remedy clinical encounters and is considered essential for the provision of quality healthcare. This study aimed to determine whether student nurses regard the inclusion of video-simulation with critical-reflection as a valuable opportunity to develop their CR skills. An existing case-based assessment was redesigned to include short video-simulations where deliberate but subtle CR flaws were included, requiring students to identify strengths and weaknesses of their own CR process. Following completion of the assessment a modified student satisfaction and selfconfidence Likert scale survey with open-ended questions was conducted to identify perceptions towards the assessment task. Incorporating video-simulation and critical-reflection was perceived as a useful opportunity to develop CR skills by student nurses. Albeit, students studying in a traditional three year Bachelor of Nursing cohort were more positive of the opportunity than their peers in a two year fast-track cohort.

History

Publication title

Student Success

Volume

12

Issue

1

Pagination

47-55

ISSN

2205-0795

Department/School

Nursing, Health Sciences

Publisher

Queensland University of Technology

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

Australia

Rights statement

Copyright the authors. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence

Socio-economic Objectives

160102 Higher education