An international exploration of blended learning use in pre-registration nursing and midwifery education

被引:5
作者
Janes, Gillian [1 ]
Ekpenyong, Mandu S. [1 ]
Mbeah-Bankas, Henrietta [2 ]
Serrant, Laura [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Dept Nursing, Manchester M15 6GX, England
[2] Hlth Educ England, Natl Programmes, Stewart House,32 Russell Sq, London WC1B 5DN, England
[3] Hlth Educ England, Don Valley House,Savile St East, Sheffield S4 7UQ, England
关键词
Blended Learning; Case Study; Internationality; Education; Nursing; Students; Midwifery; Mixed methods; Survey; STUDENTS; CLASSROOM; ONLINE; TOOL; SATISFACTION; PERFORMANCE; SKILLS;
D O I
10.1016/j.nepr.2022.103514
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Aim: To explore international experiences of using blended learning in preparing nursing and midwifery students for initial professional registration to inform future education policy.Background: The global nursing and midwifery skills shortage and need for an expanded nursing workforce that is fit for contemporary care delivery is widely acknowledged. The immense pressure the profession was already under because of austerity, staff shortages and increasingly complex healthcare needs has been worsened by the Covid-19 pandemic. The UK is extending and evaluating the use of blended learning programmes for preregistration nursing and midwifery students to help address these issues. This study sought to explore relevant nursing and midwifery experiences from outside the UK to help inform future health professional education policy here and elsewhere.Participants/settings: Nursing/nurse education leaders from across International Council of Nurses regions Methods: Exploratory online survey (n = 32) and three follow-up case studies (March-May 2021). Participants' knowledge and experiences of blended learning were examined along with any perceived benefits for workforce development and successful strategies for addressing the challenges blended learning presents in this context. Case studies were developed inductively from survey responses and follow up telephone calls to provide more detailed information about reported successes. Results: Participants reported flexibility, cost effectiveness, increased student/tutor and student/student communication and interaction as benefits of blended learning. Challenges included the design and use of interactive learning resources, appropriate preparation and support for staff and students, the potential of blended learning to exacerbate otherwise hidden disadvantage and the need for multi-stakeholder cost/benefit evaluation.Conclusions: Blended learning is used globally in the pre-registration education of nurses, midwives and other healthcare professionals. These results broadly mirror the literature regarding the benefits blended learning offers healthcare students, staff and organisations and the strategies employed to mitigate risk. As the deployment of blended learning nursing and midwifery programmes expands, further work is needed to address gaps in the current evidence base regarding the practice and impact of this approach. These concern adequate preparation and support of students and staff, ensuring access to appropriate equipment and connectivity, exploration of student perceptions that online learning is of lesser value and comprehensive multi-stakeholder, exploratory evaluation to uncover any hidden factors and impact. Tweetable abstract: Blended learning plays an effective part in the education of pre-registration nursing and midwifery students to help tackle global workforce shortages, but further work is needed to address gaps in the current evidence base regarding the practice and impact of this approach.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 49 条
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2006, QUAL RES PSYCHOL, DOI [DOI 10.1191/1478088706QP063OA, 10.1191/1478088706qp063oa, DOI 10.1080/14780887.2020.1769238]
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2021, Global strategic directions for Nursing and Midwifery 2021-2025
[4]  
Barber M., 2020, GRAVITY ASSIST PROPE
[5]   The evidence for 'flipping out': A systematic review of the flipped classroom in nursing education [J].
Betihavas, Vasiliki ;
Bridgman, Heather ;
Kornhaber, Rachel ;
Cross, Merylin .
NURSE EDUCATION TODAY, 2016, 38 :15-21
[6]   Studying physiology within a flipped classroom: The importance of on-campus activities for nursing students' experiences of mastery [J].
Bingen, Hanne Maria ;
Steindal, Simen A. ;
Krumsvik, Rune Johan ;
Tveit, Bodil .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2020, 29 (15-16) :2907-2917
[7]  
Bramer Clare, 2020, Br J Nurs, V29, P677, DOI 10.12968/bjon.2020.29.12.677
[8]   To saturate or not to saturate? Questioning data saturation as a useful concept for thematic analysis and sample-size rationales [J].
Braun, Virginia ;
Clarke, Victoria .
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN SPORT EXERCISE AND HEALTH, 2021, 13 (02) :201-216
[9]   Developing and evaluating an online learning tool to improve midwives' accuracy of visual estimation of blood loss during waterbirth: An experimental study [J].
Burns, Ethel ;
Hunter, Louise ;
Rodd, Zoe ;
MacLeod, Megan ;
Smith, Lesley .
MIDWIFERY, 2019, 68 :65-73
[10]   Return to University Classrooms With Blended Learning: A Possible Post-pandemic COVID-19 Scenario [J].
Cobo-Rendon, Rubia ;
Bruna Jofre, Carola ;
Lobos, Karla ;
Cisternas San Martin, Nataly ;
Guzman, Esteban .
FRONTIERS IN EDUCATION, 2022, 7