First year undergraduate nursing students’ perceptions of the effectiveness of blended learning approaches for nursing numeracy
The ability to safely calculate and administer medications are indispensable, core nursing skills in nursing education and practice. Therefore, it is imperative that nursing students are adequately prepared with the necessary numeracy skills during their undergraduate nursing studies. The focus of t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nurse education in practice 2020-05, Vol.45, p.102800-102800, Article 102800 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The ability to safely calculate and administer medications are indispensable, core nursing skills in nursing education and practice. Therefore, it is imperative that nursing students are adequately prepared with the necessary numeracy skills during their undergraduate nursing studies. The focus of this study, conducted at a single multi-campus university in the western Sydney region of Australia, was to determine the effectiveness of a suite of blended learning approaches on numeracy self-efficacy from the students' perspective. Surveys were administered as part of the study and included open-ended questions. 525 students provided open-ended responses that were analysed by the research team. Four main themes were identified from the open-ended responses: (i) Self-realisation; (ii) Practice, practice, practice; (iii) Boosting confidence; and (iv) Wanting more. The themes captured students' perceptions of the benefits of having a rigorous learning design in blended learning approaches. The study showed that a structured pedagogical approach to nursing numeracy in undergraduate programs improved students’ self-reported self-efficacy with mathematics and assisted students in realising the importance of learning and applying these skills as nursing clinicians.
•Nurses must be competent in the calculation and administration of medications.•Findings highlight that students need to invest time to improve numeracy skills.•Practice is vital to developing numeracy self-efficacy and competence.•Well-structured blended learning approach facilitates nursing numeracy confidence.•More face-to-face teaching is required to support safe medication practice. |
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ISSN: | 1471-5953 1873-5223 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.nepr.2020.102800 |