Salamonson Yenna, Glew Paul, Everett Bronwyn, Woodmass Joel M, Lynch Joan, Ramjan Lucie M
Western Sydney University, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia; Centre for Applied Nursing Research (CANR), Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research, Australia.
Nurse Educ Today. 2019 Jan;72:54-60. doi: 10.1016/j.nedt.2018.08.027. Epub 2018 Nov 10.
With the widening of participation in higher education, it is essential in the discipline of nursing that students are able to communicate proficiently to deliver quality patient care. However, undergraduate students can experience significant difficulties with spoken communication critical to professional nursing, which places them 'at risk' of failure during the nursing course.
To examine the relationship between students' use of academic literacy support and oral communication skills.
Prospective, correlational survey design.
A large multi-campus university in Western Sydney, Australia.
A total of 1699 assessment ratings of first and second year nursing students were completed at both baseline and at the 6-month follow-up in 2015.
The CLIP index was embedded as an assessment requirement in four clinical skills-based units and assessed at the end of each semester in the first two years of the Bachelor of Nursing program. In this study, first and second year students were assessed in Semester 1 at baseline and also six months later in Semester 2.
From Semester 1 to Semester 2, the mean CLIP scores improved from 15.8 (SD: 3.7) to 17.2 (SD: 3.3) and all four components of the mean CLIP index improved. The smallest improvement was in the area of pronunciation while the lexical component had the greatest improvement. In addition, students who attended an academic literacy consultation or workshop for oral language support were over 1.5 times more likely to achieve an improvement in CLIP score (AOR: 1.58, 95% CI: 1.26 to 1.98).
The CLIP tool can be used to track and monitor students' oral language skills over the course of their study, and identify 'at risk' students requiring additional support through on-campus language support programs.
随着高等教育参与度的不断提高,在护理学科中,学生能够熟练沟通以提供高质量的患者护理至关重要。然而,本科学生在对专业护理至关重要的口语沟通方面可能会遇到重大困难,这使他们在护理课程中面临“失败风险”。
研究学生对学术素养支持的使用与口语沟通技能之间的关系。
前瞻性、相关性调查设计。
澳大利亚悉尼西部的一所大型多校区大学。
2015年,对一年级和二年级护理专业学生的1699份评估评级在基线和6个月随访时均已完成。
CLIP指数被纳入四个基于临床技能的单元的评估要求,并在护理学士学位课程的前两年每个学期末进行评估。在本研究中,一年级和二年级学生在第一学期进行基线评估,并在第二学期6个月后再次评估。
从第一学期到第二学期,CLIP平均得分从15.8(标准差:3.7)提高到17.2(标准差:3.3),CLIP指数的所有四个组成部分均有所提高。改善最小的是发音方面,而词汇部分改善最大。此外,参加过学术素养咨询或口语支持工作坊的学生,其CLIP得分提高的可能性是未参加者的1.5倍多(调整后比值比:1.58,95%置信区间:1.26至1.98)。
CLIP工具可用于在学生学习过程中跟踪和监测他们的口语技能,并识别需要通过校内语言支持计划获得额外支持的“风险”学生。