Module Information
Course Delivery
Assessment
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | 800 Hours Clinical Assessment and First In Point Assessment Continuous clinical assessment - reflective of the student's chosen field of practice The first in-point assessment: Assessing, planning, implementing and evaluating care occurs in part one of the programme. The assessment focus is on the demonstration of fundamental care skills, development of communication skills and the ability to begin to assess the needs of service users. This also involves students taking every opportunity for ‘Making Every Contact Count’ (Public Health Wales 2017) in relation to optimising person centred, compassionate care. Assessment and achievement of each in-point assessment must relate to the context of a student’s chosen field of practice. | 100% |
Supplementary Assessment | 0 Hours Practical Exam Students must pass each element detailed in the Practice Assessment Document for Part 1 to progress to Part 2 | 100% |
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
Describe the qualities associated with being an accountable professional
Draw on strategies to deliver specific health promotion
Identify fundamental service user needs and plan person centred holistic nursing care
Deliver safe, compassionate effective nursing care and evaluate efficacy against individual service user outcomes
Implement delivery of nursing care, working effectively with teams to coordinate care for individual service users
Describe current strategies used to monitor the safety and quality of care
Describe and identify the benefits of interprofessional education in healthcare.
Brief description
Registrants “must also be able to demonstrate a greater depth of knowledge and the additional more advanced skills required to meet the specific care needs of people in their chosen fields of nursing practice.” (NMC 2018a, p.6).
The All Wales Practice Assessment strategy for pre-registration nursing programmes, which leads to entry to the professional register, identifies the process by which student performance is measured against NMC Future nurse: Standards of proficiency for registered nurses (NMC 2018a). The proficiencies in this document specify the knowledge and skills that registered nurses must demonstrate when caring for people of all ages and across all care settings. They reflect what the public can expect nurses to know and be able to do in order to deliver safe, compassionate and effective nursing care.
Content
Mapping of future nurse proficiencies and annexe skills and procedures The Nursing and Midwifery Council (2018) Standards of proficiency for registered nurses identify the proficiencies, communication and relationship management skills and nursing procedures a student nurse must be able to demonstrate to enter the NMC professional register as a Registered Nurse Graduate.
The proficiency outcomes contained within this Practice Assessment Document identify the knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviours that a student nurse must be able to demonstrate by the end of the programme. They are organised with reference to the NMC proficiency platforms and annexes (NMC 2018):
1. Being an accountable professional
2. Promoting health and preventing ill health
3. Assessing needs and planning care
4. Providing and evaluating care
5. Leading and managing nursing care and working in teams
6. Improving safety and quality of care
7. Coordinating care
Annexe A: Communication and relationship management skills Annexe B: Nursing procedures
Module Skills
Skills Type | Skills details |
---|---|
Adaptability and resilience | Students will be required to display their learnt knowledge, whilst continuing to develop their problem-solving skills in real time environments. Through mentoring and exposure, students are expected to build on their knowledge and further understand the requirement of being adaptive, creative and inventive in their everyday practice. Further, the clinical area can be challenging and students may be exposed to difficult healthcare situations which can be emotionally draining. |
Co-ordinating with others | This module will consolidate the student’s learning from the previous modules, with the practical application in real time environments. The students will learn of the professional roles and skill mix required within clinical teams to deliver holistic patient centred care. The module will further develop the practical and co-ordinational skills necessary to work in multidisciplinary teams. |
Creative Problem Solving | Students will be exposed to clinical practice and will be required to participate in the delivery of hands on patient care under direct supervision from clinical colleagues. Students will be required to display their learnt knowledge, whilst continuing to develop their problem-solving skills in real time environments. Mentoring and exposure, students are expected to build on their knowledge further understand the requirement of being adaptive, creative, inventive in their everyday practice. |
Critical and analytical thinking | Through exposure to real time clinical care, students will fully appreciate the requirement of developing critical and analytical thinking skills. This practical placement module will help students to learn through observing how clinical decisions are informed by symptom presentations, how symptoms can be associated to other clinical data and how investigations and observations can inform treatment options and care delivery, thus demonstrating that wide ranging analytical knowledge is required. |
Digital capability | This module will require the students to continue to use/and learn how to: • use blackboard/My Progress • upload entries onto their Professional Assessment Document [PAD] • submit work electronically • sit online examinations • use electronic platforms utilised in the clinical environment |
Professional communication | This module will consolidate the student’s understanding and appreciation of professional communication through exposure and participation in their practice placement. Students will be supported to further develop their learning of professional communication by giving and receiving handover, writing in patients records and clinical charts, presenting information at ward rounds, communicating with patients, families and multidisciplinary team members. |
Real world sense | This module will consolidate the student’s learning from the previous modules, with the practical application in real time environments. Students will be able to practise their clinical skills and apply their knowledge to clinical situations under supervision of their practice supervisor. The practice placement will also introduce students to the complexities of clinical practice, which will provide the foundational base for students to further develop during year 2 of the programme. |
Reflection | During this practice-based module, students will be exposed to ‘reflection in action’, which will see them developing their practice-based skills through clinical exposure and participation. Students will also further develop their ‘reflection on action’ skills by completing a reflective essay pertaining to their period in clinical practice. |
Subject Specific Skills | Students will further develop their knowledge and skills in: • professional nursing practice in relation to hands on delivery of care - clinical skills - essential/foundational skills (feeding/washing/toileting) - assessment - care planning - care evaluation - investigations and treatment delivery - communication • the delivery of person-centred holistic care • safe practice |
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 4