Abstract

Session presented on Monday, November 9, 2015 and Tuesday, November 10, 2015:

Today's nursing students engage in various learning styles, presenting challenges for faculty to educate and create meaningful learning. Numerous other factors, such as limited clinical sites and increased competition for these sites, add to the challenge. Moreover, nursing faculty are pressured to increase the number of graduates and improve retention rates as education has become increasingly focused on didactic lecture and skill attainment negating students' learning styles. Nursing education needs to be relevant and responsive as student learning evolves and transitions from passive recipients to self-authorship. In an effort to attain relevancy and respond to students' learning needs, an alternative approach to community nursing clinical in a baccalaureate program was created utilizing Kolb's experiential learning theory as a framework. Kolb (1984) deemed learning as the process wherein knowledge is created through experience. This process is achieved through four modes of experiential learning: concrete experience learning (CE), reflective observation skills (RO), abstract conceptualization abilities (AC), and active experimentation (AE). Utilizing Kolb's first two components, senior nursing students were assigned a bus ride on public transportation in order to immerse themselves fully, openly, and without bias in a culturally diverse environment and were to also reflect on and observe their experience from many viewpoints. Students journaled to capture reflective observation from these experiences to display modes of adaptation that occur during learning, that is, moving from one dimension to another in varying degrees. This assignment helped empower students to take responsibility for their learning and created a transformative clinical experience. The alternative community nursing clinical experience will be used to guide the future development of learning activities for the undergraduate nursing program whereby students can conceptualize observations into theories and implement those theories into problem solving and decision making. Future exploration of Kolb's experiential learning theory includes utilizing the Learning Style Inventory to assess individual student learning styles and evaluation of the undergraduate curricula in addressing the needs of students.

Description

43rd Biennial Convention 2015 Theme: Serve Locally, Transform Regionally, Lead Globally.

Author Details

Brandy E. Strahan, RN; Crystal Bennett, RN

Sigma Membership

Upsilon Kappa

Type

Poster

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Theory, Community Health Nursing, Alternative Clinical Experiences

Conference Name

43rd Biennial Convention

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

Conference Year

2015

Rights Holder

All rights reserved by the author(s) and/or publisher(s) listed in this item record unless relinquished in whole or part by a rights notation or a Creative Commons License present in this item record.

All permission requests should be directed accordingly and not to the Sigma Repository.

All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.

Review Type

Abstract Review Only: Reviewed by Event Host

Acquisition

Proxy-submission

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Integrating theory in an alternative community health nursing clinical experience

Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

Session presented on Monday, November 9, 2015 and Tuesday, November 10, 2015:

Today's nursing students engage in various learning styles, presenting challenges for faculty to educate and create meaningful learning. Numerous other factors, such as limited clinical sites and increased competition for these sites, add to the challenge. Moreover, nursing faculty are pressured to increase the number of graduates and improve retention rates as education has become increasingly focused on didactic lecture and skill attainment negating students' learning styles. Nursing education needs to be relevant and responsive as student learning evolves and transitions from passive recipients to self-authorship. In an effort to attain relevancy and respond to students' learning needs, an alternative approach to community nursing clinical in a baccalaureate program was created utilizing Kolb's experiential learning theory as a framework. Kolb (1984) deemed learning as the process wherein knowledge is created through experience. This process is achieved through four modes of experiential learning: concrete experience learning (CE), reflective observation skills (RO), abstract conceptualization abilities (AC), and active experimentation (AE). Utilizing Kolb's first two components, senior nursing students were assigned a bus ride on public transportation in order to immerse themselves fully, openly, and without bias in a culturally diverse environment and were to also reflect on and observe their experience from many viewpoints. Students journaled to capture reflective observation from these experiences to display modes of adaptation that occur during learning, that is, moving from one dimension to another in varying degrees. This assignment helped empower students to take responsibility for their learning and created a transformative clinical experience. The alternative community nursing clinical experience will be used to guide the future development of learning activities for the undergraduate nursing program whereby students can conceptualize observations into theories and implement those theories into problem solving and decision making. Future exploration of Kolb's experiential learning theory includes utilizing the Learning Style Inventory to assess individual student learning styles and evaluation of the undergraduate curricula in addressing the needs of students.