Nurse as Educator: Principles of Teaching and Learning for Nursing Practice, Fourth Edition has been completely revised and provides nurses and nurse educators with the critical information they need to be effective in their role as health educator, health promoter, and nursing educator. This text offers in-depth coverage on important trends, knowledge, and skills sets as well as how to care for a growing and diverse population of patients. Written in a style that enables students to easily understand new concepts and readily apply them, the Fourth Edition is a must-have for both undergraduate and graduate courses. Instructor resources include a comprehensive Instructor's Manual featuring learning activities, a Test Bank, and PowerPoint presentations. New to the Fourth Edition: New National Reports: Chapter 1 is updated with new national reports including: The IOM's new report The Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health, Motor Skill Learning: Focused on how to teach nurses motor skill learning, this new content helps instructors explain the different stages of motor learning as well as the concepts and theories behind it, eHealth Literacy Formulas: The formulas test the readability of patient care instructions and how it maps to the 27 guidelines recommended for document creation, NAP: Focus on the National Action Plan, an initiative to improve health literacy, Transgender Population Coverage: New content on the transgender population as a culture, Patient Health Literacy: Updated formulas to measure the newest vital sign-patient health literacy, Completely revised chapter on educating learners with disabilities including mental illness, sensory deficits, physical and learning disabilities, developmental disorders, and chronic illness Book jacket.
Schoessler, M., Conedera, F., Bell, L. F., Marshall, D., & Gilson, M. (1993). Use of the Myers-Briggs type indicator to develop a ... Waltz, C. F., Strickland, O. L., & Lenz, E. L. (2005). Measurement in nursing and health research (3rd ...
CD003417.pub2. del Bueno, D.J., Griffin, L. R., Burke, S. M., & Foley, M. A. (1990). The clinical teacher as a critical link in competence development. Journal of Nursing StaffDevelopment, 6, 135–138. ... Freitas, L., Lantz,J., ...
Cobussen-Boekhorst, J. G. L., Van Der Weide, M., Feitz, W. F. J., & DeGier, R. P. E. (2000). ... Frantz, R. A. (1980). ... Green, S. M., Voegeli, D., Harrison, M., Phillips,J., Knowles, J., Weaver, M., et al. (2003).
Designed to teach nurses about the development, motivational, and sociocultural differences that affect teaching and learning, this text combines theoretical and pragmatic content in a balanced, complete style. --from publisher description.
This text can be used in undergraduate or even graduate courses; one of the strengths of this text is that it is written in a style that enables students to easily understand new conceptsand readily apply them.
This textbook explores the role nurses can play in educating patients about healthcare. The 15 chapters consider the basic foundations of the education process, the needs and characteristics of the...
Constructivism theory analysis and application to curricula. Nursing Education Perspectives, 31(2), 89–92. DeCarvalho, R. (1991). The humanistic paradigm in education. The Humanistic Psychologist, 19(1), 88–104. Driscoll, M. P. (2000).
Not only do caring behaviors positively influence the student-faculty relationship and student success, students can learn these behaviors through caring interactions with faculty (Fifer, 2019). Students perceive faculty to be ...
Print+CourseSmart
Being able to make a difference in the education of a nurse makes all the other trials and tribulations encountered along the way seem worthwhile. Shirley Pearson, Room to Grow, Reflections: Nurses as Educators