Re-imaging Clinical Education: The Interdependence of the Self-Regulated Clinical Teacher and Nursing Student

Int J Nurs Educ Scholarsh. 2020 Feb 7;17(1):/j/ijnes.2020.17.issue-1/ijnes-2019-0056/ijnes-2019-0056.xml. doi: 10.1515/ijnes-2019-0056.

Abstract

The interdependence of student learning strategies and teacher's pedagogical practices is critical to clinical practice learning. While research demonstrates that formative assessment feedback is important for student learning, clinical teachers do not necessarily have the competencies to provide effective feedback to support students' self-regulated learning (SRL). An examination of clinical education through SRL lenses articulates two roles for clinical teachers in nursing clinical education: self-regulated learner and self-regulated teacher. Teachers as self-regulated learners are practice-content experts and must also learn how to explicitly help students become self-regulated learners. The latter is the self-regulated teacher role, and a self-regulated teacher is an effective clinical teacher. Minimal research addresses the ways in which clinical teachers' effectiveness could be improved if they took on a self-regulated teacher role. A model of SRL and teaching in clinical practice education is presented and its potential to enhance clinical teacher effectiveness and student SRL articulated.

Keywords: clinical teacher effectiveness; debrief; double loop model of self-regulated learning and teaching in clinical practice education; self-regulated learning; self-regulated teaching.

MeSH terms

  • Achievement*
  • Curriculum / standards
  • Education, Medical, Undergraduate / methods
  • Educational Measurement / methods*
  • Educational Status
  • Humans
  • Motivation
  • Professional Competence
  • Self-Control*
  • Students, Nursing / psychology*