Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the Pandemic

Abstract: As a nursing professor at Goshen College, a small liberal arts college in Indiana, and a nurse practitioner working at an urgent care, I have realized that there are lessons from the clinic’s transformation into a COVID-19 testing center that can be applied to educating future nurses. As...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kylee Rohatgi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing 2021-04-01
Series:Journal of Teaching and Learning with Technology
Online Access:https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/jotlt/article/view/31403
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spelling doaj-e6e8f6d4073e41278edb8cae681e4e3b2021-04-10T01:31:14ZengIndiana University Office of Scholarly PublishingJournal of Teaching and Learning with Technology2165-25542021-04-01101Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the PandemicKylee Rohatgi0Saint Mary's College Abstract: As a nursing professor at Goshen College, a small liberal arts college in Indiana, and a nurse practitioner working at an urgent care, I have realized that there are lessons from the clinic’s transformation into a COVID-19 testing center that can be applied to educating future nurses. As nurses, we must adapt to different work environments, ever-changing practices as research progresses, and a population whose needs are different now than they will be in five years. As nursing educators, these lessons are some of the most difficult to pass on to students as the majority of their nursing education occurs in a classroom or lab, and nearly all of their clinical experience occurs in a hospital. In this essay, I explore the ways in which I taught students about the resilience that nurses must have and how the transition at the urgent care has aided these efforts. For those of us with limited online teaching experience, making hours of lecture videos could have been seen as the safe choice. But doing so would have shortchanged our students: we would not have replaced students honing their skills in lab or interacting with real patients during their clinicals. I discuss some of the methods our department used to combat these tendencies; for example, my students recorded themselves physically assessing family members. In addition to demonstrating our adaptability in teaching, the nursing faculty showed our students first-hand how resilient their professors have been: several of us practice, and a handful, including me, have increased our hours on the front lines of this pandemic in part because we view nursing as our vocation: we help whenever needed (White, 2002). https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/jotlt/article/view/31403
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kylee Rohatgi
spellingShingle Kylee Rohatgi
Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the Pandemic
Journal of Teaching and Learning with Technology
author_facet Kylee Rohatgi
author_sort Kylee Rohatgi
title Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the Pandemic
title_short Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the Pandemic
title_full Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the Pandemic
title_fullStr Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the Pandemic
title_full_unstemmed Building Resilience in Nursing Students During the Pandemic
title_sort building resilience in nursing students during the pandemic
publisher Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing
series Journal of Teaching and Learning with Technology
issn 2165-2554
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract: As a nursing professor at Goshen College, a small liberal arts college in Indiana, and a nurse practitioner working at an urgent care, I have realized that there are lessons from the clinic’s transformation into a COVID-19 testing center that can be applied to educating future nurses. As nurses, we must adapt to different work environments, ever-changing practices as research progresses, and a population whose needs are different now than they will be in five years. As nursing educators, these lessons are some of the most difficult to pass on to students as the majority of their nursing education occurs in a classroom or lab, and nearly all of their clinical experience occurs in a hospital. In this essay, I explore the ways in which I taught students about the resilience that nurses must have and how the transition at the urgent care has aided these efforts. For those of us with limited online teaching experience, making hours of lecture videos could have been seen as the safe choice. But doing so would have shortchanged our students: we would not have replaced students honing their skills in lab or interacting with real patients during their clinicals. I discuss some of the methods our department used to combat these tendencies; for example, my students recorded themselves physically assessing family members. In addition to demonstrating our adaptability in teaching, the nursing faculty showed our students first-hand how resilient their professors have been: several of us practice, and a handful, including me, have increased our hours on the front lines of this pandemic in part because we view nursing as our vocation: we help whenever needed (White, 2002).
url https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/jotlt/article/view/31403
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