| Literature DB >> 32247200 |
Tanisha Jowsey1, Gail Foster2, Pauline Cooper-Ioelu3, Stephen Jacobs4.
Abstract
Prior to the Covid-19 global pandemic, we reviewed literature and identified comprehensive evidence of the efficacy of blended learning for pre-registration nursing students who learn across distances and/or via satellite campuses. Following a methodological framework, a scoping literature review was undertaken. We searched six databases (EBSCOHOST (CINHAL plus; Education research Complete; Australia/New Zealand Reference Centre); Google Scholar; EMBASE (Ovid) [ERIC (Ovid); Medline (Ovid)]; PubMed: ProQuest Education Journals & ProQuest Nursing & Allied Health Source) for the period 2005-December 2015. Critical appraisal for critiquing qualitative and quantitative studies was undertaken, as was a thematic analysis. Twenty-eight articles were included for review, which reported nursing research (n = 23) and student experiences of blended learning in higher education (n = 5). Four key themes were identified in the literature: active learning, technological barriers, support, and communication. The results suggest that when delivered purposefully, blended learning can positively influence and impact on the achievements of students, especially when utilised to manage and support distance education. Further research is needed about satellite campuses with student nurses, to assist with the development of future educational practice.Entities:
Keywords: Blended learning; Distance learning; Learning; Literature review; Pre-registration; Satellite campus
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32247200 PMCID: PMC7195119 DOI: 10.1016/j.nepr.2020.102775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurse Educ Pract ISSN: 1471-5953 Impact factor: 2.281
Fig. 1Article selection process.
Summary of included studies regarding blended learning, distance education and nurse education.
| Author(s) | Method and research design | Aim(s) of study | Sample | Relevant/key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focus group interview | To explore the experiences of mostly mature age students at a satellite campus | N = 14 students enrolled at university satellite campus - Faculty of Education (First year) | Perspectives were identified and grouped into themes of; commitment; a desire to engage in dialogue; and a sense of ownership. This was further recognised as; feeling valued with more meaningful relationships and a degree of ownership associated with an attitude of give and take. | |
| Review of empirical research | To clarify the nature and scope of blended learning and review experiences of blended learning | Higher Education | The review found that definitions of blended learning were not agreed upon and that a consensus on definition is needed. Future research needs to focus more holistically on blended learning. | |
| Survey | To examine graduating BN students perceptions of a web-enhanced learning environment, their computer literacy skills, & the use of technology and how these influenced their satisfaction | N = 170 nursing students studying a BN at 3 universities (Third year) | One third of students were competent in computer skills upon entering programme. | |
| Course evaluation | To identify areas requiring change in an on-line delivery course for nursing students at two campuses. | N = 1912 nursing and midwifery students studying a BN and Bachelor of Midwifery (First year) | The student nurses actively engaged with learning when motivation and innovation through interpersonal skills of the educators and reliability of the technologies were appropriate. Communication to reduce anxiety and resistance to innovation, and formal/informal evaluation processes included continued system development. | |
| Exploratory descriptive focus group interview | To examine the factors that assisted or hindered transition from Enrolled Nurse to Registered Nurse | N = 10 nursing students studying a BN & N = 6 teachers teaching the BN | Relearning how to learn was the main barrier and/or catapult for nurses who transitioned from one scope of practice to another within a rural context. | |
| Online survey | To evaluate student experiences with blended learning with the focus on development and delivery across schools | N = 76 Bachelor students studying across an identified tertiary institution from – nursing, business, computing schools (semester 1, n = 34 & semester 2, n = 42) | Tertiary students including BN determined that blended learning tutors need more training specifically on how to use technology in their teaching practice. Overall, students felt that insufficient orientation to blended learning occurred, they rated their overall learning experience as poor to average stating that it was difficult to study online when library support, tutor experience and the fact that they did not see the tutor were disengaging. | |
| Descriptive | To gain an understanding of the impact of flexible delivery on student engagement | N = 54 midwifery students studying a Bachelor of Midwifery programme (First year and second year) | Student midwives at both a main city campus and regional learning hubs identified skill with flexible learning, learning experiences, and engagement as important factors that influence their interaction with synchronous learning. | |
| Mixed Methodology | To collate the information from course evaluation/student satisfaction/student engagement/student grades/student retention rates and measure whether student engagement is a success with the bioscience course. | N = not identified. Nursing and Midwifery students studying a bioscience course (2006–2013) | Student satisfaction was correlated with the use of new initiatives such as podcasts, videos, quizzes, and case studies. Further initiatives were introduced to engage students fully with their learning from 2012, e.g., online learning and assessment tool, virtual classroom and peer mentoring. Minimal evidence to support the need for further new initiatives. | |
| Interview | To investigate the experiences of current and former remote students; To suggest strategies to support remote students and enable them to successfully complete their courses | N = 49 previous undergraduate and post graduate students who had studied through 1 university from remote locations from 2003 to 2007. | Distance education students were primarily concerned with personal aspects related to studying, and how the use of technology and course delivery enabled them to have contact with staff. This group of students were concerned with infrastructure, support and course content and how this influenced their learning. They made suggestions for studying as a remote student to make it a successful experience. | |
| Interpretive descriptive interview | To explore graduate nurses perceptions of their preparedness for practice after undertaking the final year of their BN in the same hospital where their BN programme was situated. | N = 10 new-graduate registered nurses | The new-graduate registered nurses found value in being situated in a clinical school within the hospital, they described it as the university away from the university. This assisted them with their engagement with nursing practice and preparedness for nursing practice. | |
| Case study | What is student engagement? | N = 1246 responses from students at 9 different types of tertiary institutions offering Higher Education Response rate 14.5% | Student Engagement – a complex construct whereby tertiary students identified major influences such as the teachers, the students own motivation and external factors. Many students viewed motivation as second to the influence of teachers with student engagement. Limitations: Not representative of national sample. | |
| Longitudinal study | To examine whether student engagement is an important indicator for the successful handling of stressors in everyday academic life | N = 1334 nursing students studying BN across 24 Universities (Second year) | Student nurses report being more actively engaged during their education, but differences in levels of engagement within subgroups of students depended on the type of institution, age and gender of student, previous training, and student's self- rated health were identified. Low levels of student engagement may lead to unhealthy student behaviour and the need to nurture student engagement was reported. Limitation: Inconclusive about the interaction effect between stress experienced by nursing students and their level of engagement. | |
| Longitudinal study | To explore the benefits, problems associated with, and the effectiveness of educational delivery methods used in a nursing programme. | N = 165 (n = 94 distance & n = 71 on campus) nursing students studying an Associate degree nursing programme | Distance student nurses perceptions of the benefits associated with their educational delivery methods were significantly different from that of their peers on campus. Location was perceived as a major benefit, as was the benefits related to technology and/or increased competence with the use of technology. | |
| Descriptive study | To identify factors that contributed to student success at the nursing distance education program at one American university | N = 47 registered nurses studying a BN (Second year) | The responses from student nurses yielded extrinsic and intrinsic factors related to attrition and persistence. Factors such as personal goals, professional goals, role stress related to the rigor of academic requirements, work demands, and time demands were identified as challenges to promote optimal student success. | |
| Questionnaire self-administered | To find out what nurses thought was distance learning education, their views on its effect & its role in contemporary nursing | Convenient | Two-thirds of participants had never experienced an online or blended approach to course delivery. Participants responded that online courses had easier course workload; and that, convenience of coordinating schedule of work, family & school activities occurred. Factors related to the success of online course delivery were computer, information technology skills and learning preferences. | |
| Qualitative Narrative | To explore the experience of nurse education certificate students who use the | N = 43 registered nurses enrolled on a Master's programme | The post-graduate nurses perceived enjoyment, flexibility/convenience, interaction, comparable or better than face-to-face, and technological problems as key categories that affected their experience with videoconferencing. | |
| Two-group RCT | To assess the effectiveness of a blended learning strategy in an introductory research course on three outcomes: students' knowledge, satisfaction and self –directed learning. | N = 112 nursing students (First year) | Nursing students perceived that blended learning had no direct impact on knowledge acquisition, satisfaction, and self-directed learning. However, motivation and the teaching method had an interaction effect on knowledge acquisition. Motivation was also positively associated with satisfaction. | |
| Qualitative | To examine nurses experiences of undertaking distance education programmes | Purposive | Lifeworld lamented, lifeworld experiences, lifeworld ceded, and learning within a bounded system were identified as important concepts for Irish registered nurses when undertaking distance education. | |
| Descriptive design | To reveal those factors which either challenged or facilitated participants learning. | N = 6 registered nurses undertaking post graduate course in wound management through blended learning | Post-graduate nurses identified: a) Personal challenges or facilitators, and b) Academic challenges or facilitators as two overarching themes that required strategies to enable their success. Being overwhelmed, academic demands, feeling powerless to institute change, getting to grips with technology and academic demands, information technology help at home, and academic milieu were concepts identified within the two main themes and students expected to better informed about the necessary computer requirements and the academic and literacy skills to enable their success with learning. | |
| Case study | To investigate if using the blended learning strategy of discussion boards enhanced the learning experience | Convenient | Value with asynchronous online learning, especially for adult learners working full-time jobs. | |
| Explorative descriptive | To describe the experiences of final year students at a public college of nursing, regarding their preparedness to become registered nurse | Purposive | Student nurses were concerned with their competency and preparedness to become a registered nurse due to: a) Inadequate theoretical preparedness for the professional nurses role related to curriculum related aspects, communication problems, library, equipment, and b) Adequate preparedness to assume the professional nurses role such as role competency. | |
| Integrative review | To ascertain the student perspective of distance education | N = 12 research studies & 2 doctoral dissertations | The review identified a general consensus by nursing students who cited convenience, accessibility, and flexibility as positive aspects of distance education, whereas technology can be an issue. Students identified communication, interaction, faculty, and feedback as important for success, this included professional socialisation and the need to be motivated, self-directed, and active participants in the learning process. | |
| Mixed method Systematic Review | To determine whether the impact of online or blended learning paradigm has the potential to enhance teaching of clinical skills in undergraduate nursing | N = 19 research studies | The review synthesised qualitative and quantitative studies, four outcomes or categories surfaced: a) Performance/clinical skills | |
| Focus Group | To capture student experiences of e-learning at multiple sites | Purposive | The nursing students and educationalists were concerned with the pedagogic use of e-learning and described factors that inhibited use, and factors that facilitated use when striving to attain a constructivist learning approach. | |
| Case study | To identify supports beyond the educator that contributed to undergraduate and graduate nursing students ability and motivation to learn online | N = 29 students (Case study 1: n = 6 undergraduate nursing students; | Students perceived that several types of support occurred at once and these often overlapped in different components when learning online. Different types of social support from family and colleagues that benefitted students were: a) Informational (advice or information to assist decision-making). | |
| Case study | To examine the benefits that blended learning provides to learning experiences at an institution | N = 260 undergraduate students (questionnaire) & N = 9 academic staff (interview). | The beneficial factors identified for learning experiences involving blended learning included detail related to the availability of resources and involved clear communication and guidance. | |
| Interpretive descriptive Focus group | To describe post graduate nursing students experiences of participating on blended learning programmes in an Irish University | N = 51 registered nurses | Registered nurses expressed many benefits and challenges with blended learning; identifying accessibility and flexibility, sense of autonomy and responsibility, and valued adult learning approaches, and application to practice as it enhanced and benefitted their learning. They also expressed challenges – such as the need to fit in time for learning around family and work commitments and technological problems. The invasiveness of the online study in everyday life was also reported as a challenge (this has not been previously identified in other research findings). | |
| Participatory action research | To assess the outcomes of the blended learning program. | N = 181 nursing and midwifery students & N = 17 instructors (excluded were students who were in semester 1&2 of their BN). | Students of nursing and midwifery have high regard for blended learning but some technological aspects influenced their learning. Increased grade point average (GPA) and participation was significantly higher in blended learning rather than face-to-face method. | |
BN=Bachelor of Nursing.
Note.
Higher education [not specifically nursing] research.
Themes and Subthemes identified from the reviewed studies.
| Theme | Subtheme |
|---|---|
| Active learning | Familiarity and confidence with blended learning |
| Challenges posed by distance education | |
| Technological barriers | Challenges with information technology |
| Support | Stress |
| Motivation | |
| Communication | Student peer, role of |