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Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room

BACKGROUND: Health care educators account for variables affecting patient safety and are responsible for developing the highly complex process of education planning. Clinical judgement is a multidimensional process, which may be affected by learning styles. The aim was to explore three specific hypo...

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Autores principales: Hallin, Karin, Häggström, Marie, Bäckström, Britt, Kristiansen, Lisbeth Porskrog
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Canadian Center of Science and Education 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4954907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26755461
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v8n6p1
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author Hallin, Karin
Häggström, Marie
Bäckström, Britt
Kristiansen, Lisbeth Porskrog
author_facet Hallin, Karin
Häggström, Marie
Bäckström, Britt
Kristiansen, Lisbeth Porskrog
author_sort Hallin, Karin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Health care educators account for variables affecting patient safety and are responsible for developing the highly complex process of education planning. Clinical judgement is a multidimensional process, which may be affected by learning styles. The aim was to explore three specific hypotheses to test correlations between nursing students’ team achievements in clinical judgement and emotional, sociological and physiological learning style preferences. METHODS: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted with Swedish university nursing students in 2012-2013. Convenience sampling was used with 60 teams with 173 nursing students in the final semester of a three-year Bachelor of Science in nursing programme. Data collection included questionnaires of personal characteristics, learning style preferences, determined by the Dunn and Dunn Productivity Environmental Preference Survey, and videotaped complex nursing simulation scenarios. Comparison with Lasater Clinical Judgement Rubric and Non-parametric analyses were performed. RESULTS: Three significant correlations were found between the team achievements and the students’ learning style preferences: significant negative correlation with ‘Structure’ and ‘Kinesthetic’ at the individual level, and positive correlation with the ‘Tactile’ variable. No significant correlations with students’ ‘Motivation’, ‘Persistence’, ‘Wish to learn alone’ and ‘Wish for an authoritative person present’ were seen. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: There were multiple complex interactions between the tested learning style preferences and the team achievements of clinical judgement in the simulation room, which provides important information for the becoming nurses. Several factors may have influenced the results that should be acknowledged when designing further research. We suggest conducting mixed methods to determine further relationships between team achievements, learning style preferences, cognitive learning outcomes and group processes.
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spelling pubmed-49549072016-07-21 Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room Hallin, Karin Häggström, Marie Bäckström, Britt Kristiansen, Lisbeth Porskrog Glob J Health Sci Article BACKGROUND: Health care educators account for variables affecting patient safety and are responsible for developing the highly complex process of education planning. Clinical judgement is a multidimensional process, which may be affected by learning styles. The aim was to explore three specific hypotheses to test correlations between nursing students’ team achievements in clinical judgement and emotional, sociological and physiological learning style preferences. METHODS: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted with Swedish university nursing students in 2012-2013. Convenience sampling was used with 60 teams with 173 nursing students in the final semester of a three-year Bachelor of Science in nursing programme. Data collection included questionnaires of personal characteristics, learning style preferences, determined by the Dunn and Dunn Productivity Environmental Preference Survey, and videotaped complex nursing simulation scenarios. Comparison with Lasater Clinical Judgement Rubric and Non-parametric analyses were performed. RESULTS: Three significant correlations were found between the team achievements and the students’ learning style preferences: significant negative correlation with ‘Structure’ and ‘Kinesthetic’ at the individual level, and positive correlation with the ‘Tactile’ variable. No significant correlations with students’ ‘Motivation’, ‘Persistence’, ‘Wish to learn alone’ and ‘Wish for an authoritative person present’ were seen. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: There were multiple complex interactions between the tested learning style preferences and the team achievements of clinical judgement in the simulation room, which provides important information for the becoming nurses. Several factors may have influenced the results that should be acknowledged when designing further research. We suggest conducting mixed methods to determine further relationships between team achievements, learning style preferences, cognitive learning outcomes and group processes. Canadian Center of Science and Education 2016-06 2015-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4954907/ /pubmed/26755461 http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v8n6p1 Text en Copyright: © Canadian Center of Science and Education http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hallin, Karin
Häggström, Marie
Bäckström, Britt
Kristiansen, Lisbeth Porskrog
Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room
title Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room
title_full Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room
title_fullStr Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room
title_full_unstemmed Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room
title_short Correlations between Clinical Judgement and Learning Style Preferences of Nursing Students in the Simulation Room
title_sort correlations between clinical judgement and learning style preferences of nursing students in the simulation room
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4954907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26755461
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v8n6p1
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