Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2682801 Teaching and Learning in Nursing 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study described the extent to which Alabama associate degree nursing faculty, implementing a standardized curriculum, implement the Quality and Safety Education in Nursing (QSEN) selected competencies of safety and teamwork and collaboration. Full-time nursing faculty with a minimum of three years teaching in the Alabama Community College System associate degree schools of nursing participated in a Web survey. The survey instrument was created to incorporate the two selected QSEN competencies' knowledge, skills, and attitude statements.The participants were predominantly female, holding a master's degree in nursing with teaching responsibilities in both the classroom and clinical setting, and had 10 years of teaching experience on average. Faculty were asked to identify the hours of direct classroom and clinical instruction dedicated to each knowledge and skill statement and rate the attitude statements in relation to importance of inclusion in the curriculum.The data reflected inconsistencies between hours of instruction and the importance rating for each attitude statement. The findings of this study did not indicate that QSEN knowledge, skills, or attitudes had current widespread inclusion in the Alabama associate degree nursing curriculum.This was the first study to explore evidence of the QSEN knowledge, skill, and attitude statements within the Alabama standardized curriculum. Implications from this study suggest that the concepts of quality and safety, although familiar to faculty, are not identifiable nor taught at the complexity level, which relates to (a) safety and (b) teamwork and collaboration. A review of the statewide curriculum may be warranted.

Keywords
Related Topics
Health Sciences Nursing and Health Professions Nursing
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