Abstract

Session presented on Saturday, April 9, 2016, and Friday, April 8, 2016:

Future nurse educators need to have real-life experience in curriculum development. The curriculum development courses for master's nurse education provides in-depth information. However, the practical application of the knowledge usually only occurs after the new nurse educator is charged with developing or revising curriculum after he or she begins his or her first teaching experience. By providing students with hands-on curriculum development of courses that may need to be developed or revised gives the students the necessary exposure to this important skill. Additionally, because the student are involved in the development, course content and activities will most likely be relevant to the learners needs. This project involved the integration of master's nursing education students in curriculum redesign of master's level courses for their capstone projects. The project consisted of two separate "curriculum committees", each of which included a faculty member as mentor, two graduate nursing students, and an instructional designer. Each committee was charged with revising a master's of nursing education course. The students had all recently successfully completed the courses. Including students in the curriculum revision and development process is a practice innovation with significant potential for advancing the theory to practice transition for new nurse educators. Rather than waiting until graduates acquire teaching position, the students engaged fully in the actual curriculum redesign while still in the student role. The development process emphasized accreditation regulations, learner experience, and future employer needs and expectations. The graduate students benefit from the mentoring and role modeling provided by the faculty supporting them. The college benefits by extensive feedback from students advocating for instructional design improvement, based on their personal experience and observation. The profession of nurse educators benefit from better prepared novice nurse educators who are armed with valuable experience and have had a chance to better identify with their new roles. This experience is needed for the redesign of nursing education to meet 21st century healthcare needs. This innovation fills an existing theory to practice gap and is anticipated to facilitate the role transition for new nurse educators.

Author Details

Robin Jill Dewald, RN, CNE; Andrew D. Palm, RN CNE; Lori A. Gofter, RN, OCN, CAPA; Maureen Walls Sileo, RN, CEN, CLNC; Marie Anne Mancuso, RN

Sigma Membership

Tau Kappa at-Large

Lead Author Affiliation

Excelsior College, Albany, New York, USA

Type

Poster

Format Type

Text-based Document

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Curriculum Development, Problem-Based Learning, Transformational Learning

Conference Name

Nursing Education Research Conference 2016

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International,National League for Nursing

Conference Location

Washington, DC, USA

Conference Year

2016

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

Additional Files

download (269 kB)

Share

COinS
 

More bang for your buck: Engaging graduate students in curriculum development

Washington, DC, USA

Session presented on Saturday, April 9, 2016, and Friday, April 8, 2016:

Future nurse educators need to have real-life experience in curriculum development. The curriculum development courses for master's nurse education provides in-depth information. However, the practical application of the knowledge usually only occurs after the new nurse educator is charged with developing or revising curriculum after he or she begins his or her first teaching experience. By providing students with hands-on curriculum development of courses that may need to be developed or revised gives the students the necessary exposure to this important skill. Additionally, because the student are involved in the development, course content and activities will most likely be relevant to the learners needs. This project involved the integration of master's nursing education students in curriculum redesign of master's level courses for their capstone projects. The project consisted of two separate "curriculum committees", each of which included a faculty member as mentor, two graduate nursing students, and an instructional designer. Each committee was charged with revising a master's of nursing education course. The students had all recently successfully completed the courses. Including students in the curriculum revision and development process is a practice innovation with significant potential for advancing the theory to practice transition for new nurse educators. Rather than waiting until graduates acquire teaching position, the students engaged fully in the actual curriculum redesign while still in the student role. The development process emphasized accreditation regulations, learner experience, and future employer needs and expectations. The graduate students benefit from the mentoring and role modeling provided by the faculty supporting them. The college benefits by extensive feedback from students advocating for instructional design improvement, based on their personal experience and observation. The profession of nurse educators benefit from better prepared novice nurse educators who are armed with valuable experience and have had a chance to better identify with their new roles. This experience is needed for the redesign of nursing education to meet 21st century healthcare needs. This innovation fills an existing theory to practice gap and is anticipated to facilitate the role transition for new nurse educators.