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A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda

Nursing practice is an outcome of good clinical teaching and learning which is facilitated by preceptors. Nursing preceptors are responsible for patient care as well as clinical teaching of nursing students. Preceptors require formal training to enable them gain appropriate pedagogical skills for co...

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Main Author: Museene, Safinah Kisu
Other Authors: Mayers, Pat
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Nursing and Midwifery 2018
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access_status_str Open Access
author Museene, Safinah Kisu
author2 Mayers, Pat
author_browse Mayers, Pat
Museene, Safinah Kisu
author_facet Mayers, Pat
Museene, Safinah Kisu
author_sort Museene, Safinah Kisu
collection Thesis
description Nursing practice is an outcome of good clinical teaching and learning which is facilitated by preceptors. Nursing preceptors are responsible for patient care as well as clinical teaching of nursing students. Preceptors require formal training to enable them gain appropriate pedagogical skills for conducting clinical teaching. In Uganda, there are no formal preceptorship training programs; however, clinical teaching and mentoring of nursing students is an occupational requirement. Limited information is known about the educational preparedness of nursing preceptors for their role. This study aimed to describe the preceptors' clinical teaching practices, design, implement and evaluate a structured and collaborative clinical teaching training program for improving the preceptors' pedagogical skills at a national referral hospital in Uganda. A three phase study was conducted. An initial cross-sectional survey of current preceptor clinical teaching practices and preceptors' perceived clinical teaching challenges was conducted. The survey results and relevant literature were utilised for the design of the training manual "A Structured and Collaborative Clinical Teaching Training Program" (SCCTTP). Preceptors from the national referral hospital were grouped into control and intervention groups. The intervention group completed a six-day training programme on the theories and practice of clinical teaching and the control group attended a one-day meeting where the results of the cross-sectional survey were presented. The evaluation of the training programme was conducted using a pre- and post-test design and follow-up at weeks six and twelve. The training programme demonstrated a positive influence on the intervention group's clinical teaching knowledge with a mean difference of 32.9% (P-value 0.00). Preceptors reported clinical teaching challenges which included understaffing, large numbers of students and severely ill patients. No statistical significance was found between the intervention and control groups with respect to preceptor confidence in their role as clinical facilitators. To promote quality clinical teaching practice, it is recommended that clear guidelines for preceptor training, number of students per preceptor are developed, nursing preceptors should receive formal training using the SCCTTP approach, and schools of nursing and their training hospitals collaborate and adopt a multifaceted approach to the teaching, learning and practicing of clinical skills.
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language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:25.185Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Division of Nursing and Midwifery
publisherStr Division of Nursing and Midwifery
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/28073 A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda Museene, Safinah Kisu Mayers, Pat Nursing Nursing practice is an outcome of good clinical teaching and learning which is facilitated by preceptors. Nursing preceptors are responsible for patient care as well as clinical teaching of nursing students. Preceptors require formal training to enable them gain appropriate pedagogical skills for conducting clinical teaching. In Uganda, there are no formal preceptorship training programs; however, clinical teaching and mentoring of nursing students is an occupational requirement. Limited information is known about the educational preparedness of nursing preceptors for their role. This study aimed to describe the preceptors' clinical teaching practices, design, implement and evaluate a structured and collaborative clinical teaching training program for improving the preceptors' pedagogical skills at a national referral hospital in Uganda. A three phase study was conducted. An initial cross-sectional survey of current preceptor clinical teaching practices and preceptors' perceived clinical teaching challenges was conducted. The survey results and relevant literature were utilised for the design of the training manual "A Structured and Collaborative Clinical Teaching Training Program" (SCCTTP). Preceptors from the national referral hospital were grouped into control and intervention groups. The intervention group completed a six-day training programme on the theories and practice of clinical teaching and the control group attended a one-day meeting where the results of the cross-sectional survey were presented. The evaluation of the training programme was conducted using a pre- and post-test design and follow-up at weeks six and twelve. The training programme demonstrated a positive influence on the intervention group's clinical teaching knowledge with a mean difference of 32.9% (P-value 0.00). Preceptors reported clinical teaching challenges which included understaffing, large numbers of students and severely ill patients. No statistical significance was found between the intervention and control groups with respect to preceptor confidence in their role as clinical facilitators. To promote quality clinical teaching practice, it is recommended that clear guidelines for preceptor training, number of students per preceptor are developed, nursing preceptors should receive formal training using the SCCTTP approach, and schools of nursing and their training hospitals collaborate and adopt a multifaceted approach to the teaching, learning and practicing of clinical skills. 2018-05-14T12:55:29Z 2018-05-14T12:55:29Z 2018 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28073 eng application/pdf Division of Nursing and Midwifery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Nursing
Museene, Safinah Kisu
A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda
title_full A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda
title_fullStr A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda
title_short A structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors' self-reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in Uganda
title_sort structured and collaborative clinical teaching training programme and its influence on nursing preceptors self reported competencies and confidence at a national referral hospital in uganda
topic Nursing
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28073
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