| Literature DB >> 31857053 |
Mary Ellen Smith Glasgow1, H Michael Dreher2, James Schreiber3.
Abstract
Standardized testing that predicts nursing student success accurately and identifies weak content areas has played a critical role in nursing education. Critics of such testing lament the harm of this type of testing, often misinterpreting common practices as well as overlooking all value. The goal of nursing school is to graduate competent professionals with adequate knowledge to practice safely, who can pass the NCLEX-RN® and gain employment. The use of standardized exit exams or comprehensive exams that are valid and reliable should be embraced as evidence-based, academically rigorous evaluation tools, much like the discipline of education has embraced the Praxis Exam. This paper will present evidence supporting the value of "program exit standardized testing" and address the importance of assessing students and focusing on minimum competency. As a profession that prides itself on the use of evidence to guide practice, we need to use evidence to guide policy development with respect to the use of standardized testing in nursing education.Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31857053 DOI: 10.1016/j.profnurs.2019.04.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prof Nurs ISSN: 8755-7223 Impact factor: 2.104