23. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing

In any nursing program, it is a challenge to foster an awareness of, and engagement with, the complexity and reality of nursing practice.  During their studies, nursing students have to learn the relevant underpinning theoretical knowledge for practice as well as develop their understanding of the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Beryl McEwan, Gylo Hercelinskyj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2012-06-01
Series:Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching
Online Access:https://celt.uwindsor.ca/index.php/CELT/article/view/3451
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spelling doaj-cc3d81bb899842688801e65e006b102f2020-11-25T02:02:34ZengUniversity of WindsorCollected Essays on Learning and Teaching2368-45262012-06-01510.22329/celt.v5i0.345123. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in NursingBeryl McEwan0Gylo Hercelinskyj1Charles Darwin UniversityCharles Darwin University In any nursing program, it is a challenge to foster an awareness of, and engagement with, the complexity and reality of nursing practice.  During their studies, nursing students have to learn the relevant underpinning theoretical knowledge for practice as well as develop their understanding of the role and responsibilities of the registered nurse in clinical settings. At a regional Australian university the Bachelor of Nursing is offered externally with the student cohort predominantly off-campus. There are significant challenges in providing opportunities to enhance learning (Henderson, Twentyman, Heel, & Lloyd, 2006) and to foster early professional engagement with the nursing community of practice (Andrew, McGuiness, Reid, & Corcoran, 2009; Elliot, Efron, Wright, & Martinelli, 2003; Morales-Mann & Kaitell, 2001) in a context for learning nursing knowledge and inter-professional collaborative practice. This paper presents the results of a series of internal audits of students’ feedback of the Charles Darwin Hospital (CDU) vHospital™ undertaken from 2008 to 2010, following integration into theory and clinical nursing subjects in the Bachelor of Nursing program.  The feedback from students demonstrates the value students place on teaching and learning activities that provide realistic situated learning opportunities (Hercelinskyj & McEwan, 2011). https://celt.uwindsor.ca/index.php/CELT/article/view/3451
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Beryl McEwan
Gylo Hercelinskyj
spellingShingle Beryl McEwan
Gylo Hercelinskyj
23. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing
Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching
author_facet Beryl McEwan
Gylo Hercelinskyj
author_sort Beryl McEwan
title 23. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing
title_short 23. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing
title_full 23. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing
title_fullStr 23. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing
title_full_unstemmed 23. An Internal Audit of a Virtual Learning Space to Facilitate Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing
title_sort 23. an internal audit of a virtual learning space to facilitate clinical decision-making in nursing
publisher University of Windsor
series Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching
issn 2368-4526
publishDate 2012-06-01
description In any nursing program, it is a challenge to foster an awareness of, and engagement with, the complexity and reality of nursing practice.  During their studies, nursing students have to learn the relevant underpinning theoretical knowledge for practice as well as develop their understanding of the role and responsibilities of the registered nurse in clinical settings. At a regional Australian university the Bachelor of Nursing is offered externally with the student cohort predominantly off-campus. There are significant challenges in providing opportunities to enhance learning (Henderson, Twentyman, Heel, & Lloyd, 2006) and to foster early professional engagement with the nursing community of practice (Andrew, McGuiness, Reid, & Corcoran, 2009; Elliot, Efron, Wright, & Martinelli, 2003; Morales-Mann & Kaitell, 2001) in a context for learning nursing knowledge and inter-professional collaborative practice. This paper presents the results of a series of internal audits of students’ feedback of the Charles Darwin Hospital (CDU) vHospital™ undertaken from 2008 to 2010, following integration into theory and clinical nursing subjects in the Bachelor of Nursing program.  The feedback from students demonstrates the value students place on teaching and learning activities that provide realistic situated learning opportunities (Hercelinskyj & McEwan, 2011).
url https://celt.uwindsor.ca/index.php/CELT/article/view/3451
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