7.A Study on Curriculum Development for Fundamentals of Nursing at the Graduate Level.
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2005;12(2):162-170
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to develop a curriculum model for fundamentals of nursing at the graduate level which reflects a consensus of educators and the students in Korean nursing society. METHOD: A survey was used with three groups to identify consensus on a curriculum model for fundamentals of nursing at the graduate level; 42 educators in fundamentals of nursing, 11 nurse educators whose major was not fundamentals of nursing and 70 nurses with a bachelor degree in nursing. RESULTS: Consensus on a curriculum model at the graduate level were delineated from analysis of the survey. Based on these results, a curriculum model for fundamentals of nursing at the graduate level is outlined: As one major area of nursing, fundamentals of nursing focuses on nursing practice based on basic human needs. Thus main focus of the curriculum for fundamentals of nursing at the graduate level is research performance and theory development on nursing interventions to meet basic human needs in clinical settings. CONCLUSIONS: A curriculum model for fundamentals of nursing at the graduate level suggests that its application may have a positive impact on development of distinct knowledge body for fundamentals of nursing that will differentiate the content of education for undergraduate and graduate levels of nursing. However, the suggestion for the curriculum model needs to be refined and developed for application.
Consensus
;
Curriculum*
;
Education
;
Education, Graduate
;
Humans
;
Nursing*
;
Societies, Nursing
9.A Study of the Curriculum of Genetics Nursing Education.
Kyung Sook CHOI ; Hyun Jung KIM ; Eun Sil JANG ; Jung Ae PARK
Journal of Korean Oncology Nursing 2010;10(1):103-111
PURPOSE: This study was undertaken to establish the framework for development of the curriculum of genetics in Nursing Education. METHODS: The Internet search, literature review of the US system of genetic nurses, genetic graduate nursing education programs and curricula for nurse in Korea were reviewed and analyzed. RESULTS: American Nurses genetic system consists of APNG and the GCS and all the APNG credential provided by the GNCC of ISONG. The curriculums of genetic nursing education in the US are mainly conducted in of master's program and genetically related subjects consists of basic genetics subjects, basic applied genetics subjects, genetics in nursing subjects and practical training subjects. Lastly a genetic nursing education program in Korea 44 hr of lectures and practical training of 4 hr is composed of basic genetics, genetic cancer, genetics in nursing and practicum in the computer lab and online include family history assessment, pedigree construction, breast and colorectal cancer risk calculations, and ELSI discussions. CONCLUSION: This study suggested that genetic nursing education course needs in master's program as detailed subjects. Also the establishment of the genetic nurse system is an urgent needed.
Breast
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Colorectal Neoplasms
;
Curriculum
;
Education, Nursing
;
Education, Nursing, Graduate
;
Humans
;
Internet
;
Korea
;
Lectures
;
Pedigree
;
Pyridines
;
Thiazoles
10.Trends of Doctoral Dissertations in Nursing Science: Focused on Studies Submitted Since 2000.
Hyunsook SHIN ; Kyung Mi SUNG ; Seok Hee JEONG ; Dae Ran KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2008;38(1):74-82
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to identify the characteristics of doctoral dissertations in nursing science submitted since 2000. METHOD: Three-hundred and five dissertations of six schools of nursing published from 2000 to 2006 in Korea were analyzed with the categories of philosophy, method, body of knowledge, research design, and nursing domain. RESULT: In philosophy, 82% of all dissertations were identified as scientific realism, 15% were relativism, and 3% were practicism. Two-hundred and fifty dissertations (82%) were divided into a quantitative methodology and 55 dissertations (18%) were qualitative methodology. Specifically, 45% were experimental, 23% methodological, 13% survey and 17% qualitative designed researches. Prescriptive knowledge was created in 47% of dissertations, explanatory knowledge in 29%, and descriptive knowledge in 24%. Over 50% of all research was studied with a community-based population. In the nursing domain, dissertations of the practice domain were highest (48.2%). CONCLUSION: Dissertations since 2000 were markedly different from the characteristics of the previous studies (1982-1999) in the increase of situation-related, prescriptive and community-based population studies. A picture of current nursing science identified in this study may provide a future guideline for the doctoral education for nursing.
*Dissertations, Academic as Topic
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Education, Nursing, Graduate/*trends
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Humans
;
Korea
;
Nursing Research/*trends
;
Nursing Theory
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Philosophy, Nursing
;
Qualitative Research
;
Research Design