F.A. Davis Creating Practice Ready Nurses

How Davis Advantage can help Sprinkle and spread clinical judgment everywhere Ideas for your classroom

Challenge students with initiating Davis Advantage Clinical Judgment assignments as a part of classroom preparation. For example, ask them to apply the NCSBN’s Clinical Judgment Measurement Model, layer 3 (https://www.nclex.com/clinical- judgment-measurement-model.page) to a clinical example in their textbook readings. Review the assignments as a class. Support students in developing clinical imagination. Create opportunities for students to explore the multiple facets of a patient’s situation by placing the student imaginatively into the real world of clinical practice. Use of images attached to Davis Advantage case studies helps. Present material using EHR forms to create realism. Eliminate narrative presentation of clinical situations, including medication math and skill teaching. A health care provider’s order form, medication administration record, intake/output, or vital sign flow sheet can make all the difference. Use Davis Advantage Clinical Judgment cases to bring a patient to class. Facilitate small group or entire class application. Expand the case by holding a classroom debate on whether the patient is acute, chronic, stable, unstable, and what care can be delegated to other members of the health care team. Ask students to delineate the priority care to be performed in the first 5 minutes, 1 hour, or by the end of the shift. Give the class a verbal handoff report on 4 patients in the Davis Advantage Clinical Judgment cases. Have them work to prioritize which patient should be seen first and why. Assign a Davis Advantage Clinical Judgment case and have students work in small groups to build a Next Gen-style test item. Provide them with the template and format. Davis Advantage is built using concepts of andragogy, metacognition, and clinical judgment application. Customer feedback supports the value of high-level thinking in the transformation of students into practice-ready nurses. Learn More! Visit FADavis.com/NextGen or email us at Hello@FADavis.com References Benner, P. (1982). From Novice to Expert. American Journal of Nursing 82 (3), 402-407. DelBueno, D. (2005). A crisis in critical thinking. Nursing Education Perspectives , 26, 278-283. Kavanaugh, J., Szweda, C. (2017). A crisis in competency: The strategic and ethical imperative to assessing new graduate nurses’ clinical reasoning. Nurse Education Perspectives , 38, 57-62. Kavanaugh, J., Sharpneck, P.A. (2021). Crisis in competency: A defining moment in nursing education. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing , 26 (1), Manuscript 2. NCSBN: Clinical Judgment Measurement Model: A Framework to Measure Clinical Judgment & Decision Making. https://www.nclex.com/clinical-judgment- measurement-model.page About the Author Karin Sherrill, MSN, RN, CNE, ANEF, FAADN has been a nurse educator for over 30 years. She works as a nursing education consultant, supporting faculty in creating better nurses. “The inclusion of adaptive learning technology and comprehensive assessment resources further enhance students’ understanding and application of nursing fundamentals. I highly recommend Davis Advantage as a robust instructional tool that supports student success in the field of nursing.” —Elizabeth Hughes, Rasmussen University

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