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      Teaching undergraduate students community nursing: using action research to increase engagement and learning.

      The Journal of nursing education
      Australia, Community Health Nursing, education, Curriculum, Health Services Research, Humans, Problem-Based Learning, methods, Program Development

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          Abstract

          Nurses play a pivotal role in responding to the changing needs of community health care. Therefore, nursing education must be relevant, responsive, and evidence based. We report a case study of curriculum development in a community nursing unit embedded within an undergraduate nursing degree. We used action research to develop, deliver, evaluate, and redesign the curriculum. Feedback was obtained through self-reflection, expert opinion from community stakeholders, formal student evaluation, and critical review. Changes made, especially in curriculum delivery, led to improved learner focus and more clearly linked theory and practice. The redesigned unit improved performance, measured with the university's student evaluation of feedback instrument (increased from 0.3 to 0.5 points below to 0.1 to 0.5 points above faculty mean in all domains), and was well received by teaching staff. The process confirmed that improved pedagogy can increase student engagement with content and perception of a unit as relevant to future practice. Copyright 2011, SLACK Incorporated.

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          Journal
          21627051
          10.3928/01484834-20110531-03

          Chemistry
          Australia,Community Health Nursing,education,Curriculum,Health Services Research,Humans,Problem-Based Learning,methods,Program Development

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