Despite high pass rates on the US nursing licensure exam, the National Council Licensure Exam for Registered Nurses (NCLEX-RN) (ncsbn.org), graduates of nursing programs are struggling to make safe decisions in today's complex healthcare environment (Kavanagh & Sharpnack, 2021). Therefore, the Next Generation NCLEX has been introduced to assess the development of clinical judgment in US (ncsbn.org). Use of a clinical judgment model to guide a strategic combination of teaching and learning strategies, provide a common language, and guide alignment of the curriculum is recommended. Multiple research and evidence-based models exist, yet pre-licensure nursing programs use a clinical judgment model to guide teaching and learning, and what teaching strategies are currently used was unknown. The purpose of this course is to provide foundational evidence for how pre-licensure nursing programs are using clinical judgment models and teaching strategies to promote students' clinical judgment, and present a framework to support faculty integration of a clinical judgment model and use of multiple teaching strategies in pre-licensure nursing curricula.
1. How to explain the benefits of theoretical support for curricular design that supports development of clinical judgment.
2. Ability to describe how use of a clinical judgment model may enhance student development of clinical judgment.
3. How to explain the benefits of a combination of teaching strategies to promote clinical reasoning and judgment.
1 hours
Online, Self paced
$30 - Non-members | $27 - Members
0.1 CEUs / 1 Contact Hour
This program is intended for nurse educators seeking professional development and continuing education.
This course is self-paced.
Learners will need access to a computer, tablet, or smart phone to complete the course.
There will be no cancellations, returns, or exchanges. No exceptions.