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Nursing leadership competencies: low-fidelity simulation as a teaching strategy

Faculty Advisor

Date

2014

Keywords

leadership, communication, simulation, reflexivity

Abstract (summary)

Nurses must demonstrate leadership and followership competencies within complex adaptive team environments to ensure patient and staff safety, effective use of resources, and an adaptive health care system. These competencies are demonstrated through the use of communication strategies that are embedded within a relational practice. Health care professionals, regardless of formal position, need to assert their opinions and perspectives using a communication style that demonstrates value of all team members in open discussions about quality patient care, appropriate access, and stewardship. Challenges to effective communication and relational practice are the individual and organizational patterns of behavior, and the subsequent impact that these behaviors have on others. Students articulate situational awareness when they conduct a critical analysis of individual, team, and organizational functioning, and then use this information and evidence gained from a critical literature review to develop recommendations to improve individual, team, and/or organizational performance. Leadership and followership simulation exercises, inclusive of public feedback and debriefing, are used as a pedagogical/andragogical strategy in a nursing baccalaureate senior leadership course to facilitate learning of team communication skills and improve situational awareness. We view this strategy as an alternative to traditional classroom learning activities which provide little opportunity for recursive learning.

Publication Information

Pollard, C., & Wild, C. (2014). Nursing leadership competencies: Low fidelity simulation as a teaching strategy. Nurse Education in Practice, 14(6), 620-626. doi: 10.1016/j.nepr.2014.06.006

Notes

Item Type

Language

English

Rights

Attribution-NoDerivs (CC BY-ND)