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Introduction
The student was shaking and almost completely white. I am so frightened.
What if I do something wrong? Will I make it through the shift?
Are these feelings normal? Will I fail because I cannot get my
feelings under control? Do others feel the same way I do?
I wished I could share with her one of the first times I felt
the terror of a new situation. I was a student in the 3rd year
of nursing, and the nurse with whom I was working had to go to
a meeting. I was alone in intensive care with a very sick child.
There was a registered nurse (RN) in the next room whom I could
call for if I needed help, but it is not the same as the RN standing
beside me.
"Dear child, do not stop breathing!" I whispered. "I
really do not know what to do." My face felt hot and my mouth
felt dry. "Yes, the nurse has confidence in my ability to
watch you, but why do I feel this way? Should I admit my feelings?
Would I fail this course?" I took a deep breath and watched
the ventilator methodically deliver breaths of air. The child
was slowly turning from a pale color to a pink color. "Lord,
help me get through this experience."
The student said, I did not learn anything last quarter. Class
was so boring.
I had high expectations of learning to teach nursing. But I, too,
remembered the boring classes. Often, the teachers read directly
from our textbooks. After 20 minutes I lost interest even though
the teacher asked questions, moved about in the room, and even
varied her voice. Was this the way I wanted to teach? Are there
other methods I could learn to utilize so that my teaching would
come alive?
The student said, I have learned more this quarter than I ever
have. You really made me think. Learning was so much fun. I loved
the group work. I wish every class was like this.
Cooperative learning, what is this? Do you mean students can learn
from each other? What do you mean the teacher is not the focus
in the classroom, the students are? I do not need to know all
the answers! I find students can actually participate in knowing
the answers. Accountability, responsibility, positive interdependencelearning
together in a group can be fun. Teaching has come alive again.
If I can start slowly and gradually build in order to help others
to learn to teach this way, what an "awe-inspiring"
experience this will be!
The preceding written statements are dialogues from students whom
I have taught in the past 6 years. I have included my thoughts.
These experiences have spurred me to study pedagogical methods
that will enrich the students' experiences so they can achieve
their goals of being professional nurses.
In this chapter I discuss issues related to nursing, to nursing
education, and,
more specifically, to clinical education. The purpose of this
dissertation and the guiding
questions of this study are discussed.
Issues in Nursing
Society is rapidly changing and so are the expectations of the
health care system. According to Heaslip (1996): "The health
care system is experiencing demands from the public for increased
access to nursing and medical care within the constraints of limited
financial, physical and personnel resources" (p. 3). It is
common for a new graduate to care for clients with multiple medical
diagnoses and multiple pieces of technical equipment connected
to these patients. Not only is the new graduate to care for many
clients, but he or she is to coordinate the care with multiple
health personnel as well as to work with less technical personnel
such as nurse aides and medical assistants. A registered nurse
must have the skills of teamwork, critical thinking, and problem
solving as well as self-confidence, flexibility, and innovation
(Walton, 1996) while working in this complex changing world of
the practical setting. Health care, including hospital administration,
is demanding nurses to possess all of these skills.
So where do nurses learn to be flexible and confident? How do
they become critical thinkers and team members? It starts with
education and the resourceful ways we teach students to interact
and think critically in the clinical setting.
Issues in Nursing Education
Education for the clinical setting starts in the classroom. Unfortunately, according
to Pitts (1985), "nursing knowledge is transmitted via
passive learning with standards of professional instruction and
supervised practice" (p. 37). As a result, nursing education
has often been inadequate in preparing students to develop clinical
decision-making skills and to become critical thinkers (Jenks,
1992). The sixth objective of the National Education Goal 5 emphasizes
that, by the year 2000, "the proportion of college graduates
who demonstrate an advanced ability to think critically, communicate
effectively, and solve problems will increase substantially"
(National Educational Goals Panel, 1994, p. 10). Nursing education
recognizes the need to teach critical thinking, and decision-making
and problem-solving techniques to students. The National League
for Nursing (NLN), the accrediting body for B.S./A.S. nursing
schools, has mandated that nursing schools establish outcome criteria
for critical thinking as a part of the curriculum (National League
for Nursing Association Commission, 1997).
According to Walton (1996): "Old assumptions and methods
of educating nursing students must be examined in the light of
changing expectations and health care delivery systems" (p.
400). Nursing education needs to find new avenues of approach
that will include the use of the increasing amount of knowledge
needed to be applied to the curriculum content (Heaslip, 1996).
One of the strategies that may promote critical thinking is cooperative
learning. Nurse educators recognize the merits of using cooperative
learning to teach nursing content (Boltz, Boltz, & Glenn,
1993; Glendon & Ulrich, 1992), but the research in cooperative
learning in nursing is sparse. Ashley and O'Neil (1994) show that
nursing students (high risk) who studied cooperatively achieved
higher scores on state boards than a control group that had no
interventions. Other research has shown an increase in students'
knowledge (Hiebert, 1996; Houston, 1990), and an increase in key
cognitive activity (Higgins, 1991), an increase in peer socialization
and in positive attitudes toward learning (Beck, 1992) as a result
of using cooperative learning in the classroom.
As a nursing educator I have used cooperative learning in my classroom.
I believe it facilitates problem solving and critical thinking.
At first it was a challenging strategy for me to use. Coming from
a traditional background, giving up "control" of the
knowledge to adopt a collaborative role was new and different
for me. After all, I was the imparter of all knowledge, or so
I thought. The Johnson, Johnson, and Smith (1998) model taught
me the importance of establishing an environment that promotes
exchange between the student and the teacher and the student and
other students. Gradually, the comments from my classroom changed
from this is boring to I really learned a lot from this class.
You really made me think. Because of these comments I was driven
to continue the search for methods that will help nursing students
expand their thinking in applying nursing theory to clinical settings.
Issues in Clinical Education
The goal of undergraduate nursing programs is to develop "an
autonomous, accountable practitioner who has not only the practical
skills necessary to deliver high quality nursing care, but also
the broad knowledge base and analytical ability to make informed
decisions about care" (Jinks, 1991, p. 127). Student nurses
spend two-thirds of their hours of nursing education in the clinical
setting, and yet it is "the least understood of all nursing
education activities" (Infante, 1981, p. 16). Tanner and
Lindeman (1987) identified six of the top research priorities
related to clinical teaching:
1. What method of instruction best develops clinical problem-solving
skills at baccalaureate and master's levels?
2. What is the most effective approach to teaching clinical nursing
skills?
3. What clinical teaching strategies are more conducive to the
development of professional qualities: e.g., critical thinking,
accountability, change agent?
4. What types of clinical performance evaluation strategies are
most reliable and valid?
5. What factors enhance the transfer of didactic learning into
clinical practice?
6. What factors in clinical experience (e.g., number of hours,
rotations, faculty/student ratios) are associated with the level
of performance at graduation? (p. 56)
A recent review of literature indicates the concerns regarding
clinical teaching are still there. Krichbaum (1994) states:
Professional nursing education is costly, time-consuming, and
inundated with methods passed from generation to generation of
nursing faculty as practical wisdom about effectiveness in clinical
teaching. Few aspects of clinical teaching have been investigated
empirically, let alone validated. (p. 314)
Clinical education is a complex activity. The clinical experience
is often unpredictable and difficult to control. The nurse-educator
not only needs to ensure that the nursing student acquires knowledge
and problem-solving ability, but needs to protect the patient
from harm by ensuring that the student practices safe care. As
a clinical educator, I guide the students through the complex
and ever-changing situations of the clinical experience so they
can analyze and synthesize information learned in the classroom
and connect it to the practical situations they face.
The challenge of teaching nursing students in the clinical setting
made me wonder if pairing students as they care for the patients
would have the same benefits as pairing students in the classroom
setting. Some of the classroom benefits include increasing problem-solving
skills, critical-thinking skills, self-confidence, communication,
and social interaction (Johnson, Johnson, & Holubec, 1994;
Sharan & Sharan, 1990).
In reviewing literature on cooperative learning in the nursing
clinical setting, I did not find the term cooperative learning.
The closest terms are collaboration, teamwork, dual (two students
at the same level working together on one patient; instructor
has given a clear specific task for each student to perform),
multiple or shared assignments (two students at the same level
working together on one patient) and reciprocal learning (students
on the same level evaluating each other's skills). Baird, Bopp,
Schofer, Langenberg, and Matheis-Kraft (1994) found that in a
collaborative activity between a student and an RN mentor there
was an increase in self-confidence and a decrease in anxiety.
Warner, Ford-Gilboe, Laforet-Fliesser, Olson, and Ward-Griffin
(1994) concluded that a shared assignment in a community experience
offered students the opportunity to learn about collaboration
in the clinical setting. Two articles advocate the use of dual
assignments (Fugate & Rebeschi, 1992; Gotschall & Thompson,
1990) as a way to increase faculty quality time with the student
and to increase problem-solving skills.
My Pilot Study
Because very little research has been done on the benefits of
cooperative learning in the clinical setting, I conducted a pilot
study to investigate the feasibility of pairing students in the
clinical setting. I used qualitative research processes because
they allowed me "to focus on identifying, documenting, and
knowing (by interpretation) the world views, values, meanings,
beliefs, thoughts, and general characteristics of life events,
situations, ceremonies, and specific phenomena under investigation"
(Leininger, 1985, p. 5). I wanted the students' viewpoint on their
experience which can best be studied by using this method. In
the pilot study I formed two pairs, and the paired students reflected
on their experiences through the use of journaling. They also
shared their experiences with me during two interviews during
the quarter. The themes that emerged seemed consistent with previous
research on cooperative learning.
The first themespsychological health, self-esteem and self-confidenceemerged
in statements such as:
Working together increased my self-confidence; it made the experience
not only fun but also kept the stress level down, which I believe
will help us become better nurses (Journals of D. R., p. 1; P.
K., p. 11).
Davis (1995) indicated that anxiety associated with the learning
environment was reduced through peer support and cooperation.
A second powerful theme that emerged was the use of thinking skills.
We learned from each other. We found in working together we
could challenge each other to think and to work toward improving
our skills (Journals of M. P., p. 8; S. D., p. 9). Because the
decisions nurses make affect people's lives, developing critical
thinking is the most important and challenging goal a nursing
student can accomplish (Alfaro-Lefevre, 1995).
The third theme that emerged was positive relationships and attitudes.
The following statements made by the students illustrate this:
I appreciated input from my partner. We could talk things over.
I missed my partner when she was sick. There was no one else to
share the new experiences with. As we worked together, we discovered
that our communication skills increased. We were
able to organize ourselves better and get things done. Clinicals
were fun to do (Journals P. K., p. 3; S. D., p. 7). Johnson et
al. (1998) have shown that cooperative learning brings about more
positive attitudes toward material studied, class instruction,
and personal relationships.
While observing the students working together, I found it was
quite common for them to be side-by-side discussing how they could
prioritize their time and how they could share activities. I also
observed eagerness when coming to clinical labs and the regret
to go home. They enjoyed learning together.
Because of the pilot study, I was able to set up certain guidelines
for using cooperative pairs in the clinical setting, but I did
not want to stop there. I agreed with Batson (1997) who said,
"to function well in a society of rapid social and technological
change, schools need to become teaching-learning communities through
which not only the children but also teachers, parents and administrators
learn and grow" (p. vii). I had allowed experience to be
the teacher of knowledge, but I was still faced with the challenge
of continuing to develop strategies that would help students solve
problems, make safe clinical decisions, interact as a team member
in the clinical setting, and in the process bridge the gap between
theory and practice. This led to the purpose of my study.
Purpose
The purpose of this dissertation is to describe students' clinical
reflective processes as they problem solve while working individually
and in pairs caring for patients. The secondary purpose is to
describe my experience as I initiated journal writing individually
and in pairs while students worked in the clinical setting.
The Questions
The primary question is: How can clinicals be organized so students
link theory to practice? Because this question can have multiple
answers, I chose two related major questions for this case study
research:
1. How does the journaling process influence reflection on problem
solving in the clinical setting?
2. How can the clinical experience be evaluated for the presence
of reflective processes?
The Posture of the Researcher
By including my experience with the experiences of the students
in this research study, it allows me to bring understanding of
"how the environment acts on itself as well as how the inquirer
[me] causes it to behave in different ways" (Guba & Lincoln,
1981, p. 129). I bring my knowledge and my way of knowing in describing
and interpreting the phenomenon as it is presented. Lastly, by
including my experience, the process of being the tool of the
inquiry provides an opportunity "to explore new areas of
knowledge and to gain a fresh perspective about traditional and
new views of the nature of nursing" (Leininger, 1985, p.
22).
Because the experience is mine, I am explaining, describing, and
interpreting the information as I view it. Because the knowledge
I have gained through reflection, observation, and interaction
with the students is a part of this experience, I believe using
the first-person voice is the best way to communicate to readers
the results of this research study.
Definition of Terms
The following are definitions of terms as they will be used throughout
this study:
Critical Thinking: "Reasonable reflective thinking that is
focused on deciding what to believe or do" (Baker, 1996,
p. 19). "Critical thinking is thinking about your thinking
while you are thinking in order to make your thinking better"
(Paul, 1993, p. 91).
Clinical Experience: An experiential activity whereby nursing
students learn to care for a patient in the hospital setting.
Decision Making: The formulation of a hypothesis based on combined
facts from appropriate knowledge bases and from the selection
of nursing interventions that best meets the needs of the patient.
It includes the thoughts that preceded the choice of the intervention.
Journal Writing: To express personal thoughts in written form,
guided by specific questions related to problem solving and thinking.
Nursing Process: "A systematic, rational method of planning
and providing individualized nursing care. Its purpose is to identify
a client's health status, actual or potential health care problems
or needs; and to deliver specific nursing interventions to meet
those needs" (Kozier, Erb, Blais, & Wilkinson, 1995,
p. 83). The nursing process is an adaptation of problem-solving
techniques.
Reflection: "An important human activity in which people
recapture their experience, think about it, mull it over, and
evaluate it" (Boud, Keogh, & Walker, 1985, p.19).
Problem Solving: "The process used to resolve or answer a
proposed question or achieve an answer to a client's need"
(Klaassens, 1992, p. 29). It involves defining the problem, gathering
information, analyzing the information, developing solutions,
making a decision, implementing the decision, and evaluating the
solutions.
Summary
Nursing students spend two thirds of their educational time in
the clinical setting working directly with patients. Nurse educators
realize that in this complex setting, they need to develop strategies
to maximize student learning while ensuring patient safety. Because
there is very little research on strategies that promote problem
solving, teamwork, and reflection (critical thinking) in the clinical
setting, this study describes tools developed to promote and evaluate
the outcomes of the clinical experience. The following chapters
describe the clinical experience where journaling was incorporated
into the clinical requirements.