Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study

Aim The study aim was to explore the issues and challenges facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective. The research questions were: What is the institutional field of nursing education? What are the issues and challenges facing nursing...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sheane, Vanessa
Other Authors: Duncan, Susan
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12912
id ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-12912
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nursing education
Institutional theory
Institutional complexity
Dominant organizations
Case study
spellingShingle Nursing education
Institutional theory
Institutional complexity
Dominant organizations
Case study
Sheane, Vanessa
Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study
description Aim The study aim was to explore the issues and challenges facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective. The research questions were: What is the institutional field of nursing education? What are the issues and challenges facing nursing education? How is the institutional field of nursing education contributing to the issues and challenges? How are the issues and challenges contributing to the institutional complexity? Background Nursing education is essential for the health care of society, yet face various issues and challenges at the system level. Institutional theory has been used in higher education to better understand how higher education institutions are structured and operate. Institutional theory has not been used in nursing education. The issues facing nursing education have been examined from a critical or descriptive perspective, but a system-level perspective is missing. Institutional theory could fill this gap and examine the institution of nursing and how its structure, behaviours, and rules influence those issues and challenges. Methods An exploratory single-case study with embedded units design was used. Theoretical propositions from institutional theory informed the sample, recruitment, data collection, and data analysis. In 2019, representatives from organizations comprising the institutional field of nursing education and senior-level administrators were interviewed and relevant documents were collected and reviewed. The data were analyzed using deductive and inductive thematic analysis, building a case description, and visual analysis techniques. Findings The findings from sixty documents and seven interviews suggested the institutional field of nursing education is composed of postsecondary institutions, health service organizations, the regulatory body, the ministry for health, and the ministry for postsecondary education. The issues and challenges facing nursing education included demands on curricula, teaching and learning values versus practice, the relationship between education and practice, limiting financial supports, clarity of the RN role, and need for faculty. The institutional field of nursing education is complex and includes dominant organizations, such as the regulatory body and health service organization, and the non-dominant organization, postsecondary institutions. Discussion / Conclusion The use of institutional theory was beneficial to explore the issues and challenges facing undergraduate nursing education from a system-level perspective and captured the complexity within the system. The institutional field including the influences of structure, dominance, and complexity impact the issues and challenges facing nursing education. The institutional perspective of the issues and challenges diverges from previous examinations. In addition, the use of institutional theory in higher education offers strategies for advocacy in nursing education. Recommendations for nursing education practice, policy, and research include: (a) awareness of the organizations comprising the institutional field of nursing education, (b) including the nursing education accreditation body and the professional association within the interorganizational structures, (c) acknowledgement of the sources of dominance within the field, and (d) developing strategies for academic nurse leaders to navigate the complexity of nursing education. The most urgent consideration arising from this research is the dominant forces from regulation and health service organizations and the subsequent non-existence of the professional voice of nursing for nursing education within the institutional field. === Graduate
author2 Duncan, Susan
author_facet Duncan, Susan
Sheane, Vanessa
author Sheane, Vanessa
author_sort Sheane, Vanessa
title Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study
title_short Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study
title_full Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study
title_fullStr Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study
title_sort exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12912
work_keys_str_mv AT sheanevanessa exploringthechallengesandissuesfacingundergraduatenursingeducationinonecanadianprovincefromaninstitutionaltheoryperspectiveacasestudy
_version_ 1719401972805664768
spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-129122021-05-02T05:32:21Z Exploring the challenges and issues facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective: a case study Sheane, Vanessa Duncan, Susan Mallidou, Anastasia Nursing education Institutional theory Institutional complexity Dominant organizations Case study Aim The study aim was to explore the issues and challenges facing undergraduate nursing education in one Canadian province from an institutional theory perspective. The research questions were: What is the institutional field of nursing education? What are the issues and challenges facing nursing education? How is the institutional field of nursing education contributing to the issues and challenges? How are the issues and challenges contributing to the institutional complexity? Background Nursing education is essential for the health care of society, yet face various issues and challenges at the system level. Institutional theory has been used in higher education to better understand how higher education institutions are structured and operate. Institutional theory has not been used in nursing education. The issues facing nursing education have been examined from a critical or descriptive perspective, but a system-level perspective is missing. Institutional theory could fill this gap and examine the institution of nursing and how its structure, behaviours, and rules influence those issues and challenges. Methods An exploratory single-case study with embedded units design was used. Theoretical propositions from institutional theory informed the sample, recruitment, data collection, and data analysis. In 2019, representatives from organizations comprising the institutional field of nursing education and senior-level administrators were interviewed and relevant documents were collected and reviewed. The data were analyzed using deductive and inductive thematic analysis, building a case description, and visual analysis techniques. Findings The findings from sixty documents and seven interviews suggested the institutional field of nursing education is composed of postsecondary institutions, health service organizations, the regulatory body, the ministry for health, and the ministry for postsecondary education. The issues and challenges facing nursing education included demands on curricula, teaching and learning values versus practice, the relationship between education and practice, limiting financial supports, clarity of the RN role, and need for faculty. The institutional field of nursing education is complex and includes dominant organizations, such as the regulatory body and health service organization, and the non-dominant organization, postsecondary institutions. Discussion / Conclusion The use of institutional theory was beneficial to explore the issues and challenges facing undergraduate nursing education from a system-level perspective and captured the complexity within the system. The institutional field including the influences of structure, dominance, and complexity impact the issues and challenges facing nursing education. The institutional perspective of the issues and challenges diverges from previous examinations. In addition, the use of institutional theory in higher education offers strategies for advocacy in nursing education. Recommendations for nursing education practice, policy, and research include: (a) awareness of the organizations comprising the institutional field of nursing education, (b) including the nursing education accreditation body and the professional association within the interorganizational structures, (c) acknowledgement of the sources of dominance within the field, and (d) developing strategies for academic nurse leaders to navigate the complexity of nursing education. The most urgent consideration arising from this research is the dominant forces from regulation and health service organizations and the subsequent non-existence of the professional voice of nursing for nursing education within the institutional field. Graduate 2021-05-01T00:51:33Z 2021-05-01T00:51:33Z 2021 2021-04-30 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12912 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf