Investigating the digital literacy needs of healthcare students: Using mobile tablet devices for the assessment of student-nurse competency in clinical practice

Authors: Evangelinos, G. and Holley, D.

Journal: Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering, LNICST

Volume: 160

Pages: 60-67

ISBN: 9783319288826

ISSN: 1867-8211

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-28883-3_8

Abstract:

This case study investigates the digital attitudes, skills and development needs of nursing students when using mobile tablet devices to assess studentnurse competencies in clinical practice. Participants have been asked to complete a bespoke skills-based digital competence self-assessment questionnaire based on the EU DIGCOMP framework; this enabled a baseline for both individual and group. The individual characteristics of students were further explored through comments and their reflective diaries results show a complex, highly-individual profile for each student while the group exhibits common characteristics. Further work is proposed to investigate intricacies on how students perceive and use technologies in education and daily lives.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/23476/

Source: Scopus

Investigating the Digital Literacy Needs of Healthcare Students: Using Mobile Tablet Devices for the Assessment of Student-Nurse Competency in Clinical Practice.

Authors: Evangelinos, G. and Holley, D.

Editors: Vincenti, G., Bucciero, A. and Vaz de Carvalho, C.

Conference: e-LEOT 2015

Pages: 60-67

Publisher: Springer International Publishing

ISBN: 9783319288826

ISSN: 1867-8211

Abstract:

This case study investigates the digital attitudes, skills and development needs of nursing students when using mobile tablet devices to assess studentnurse competencies in clinical practice. Participants have been asked to complete a bespoke skills-based digital competence self-assessment questionnaire based on the EU DIGCOMP framework; this enabled a baseline for both individual and group. The individual characteristics of students were further explored through comments and their reflective diaries results show a complex, highly-individual profile for each student while the group exhibits common characteristics. Further work is proposed to investigate intricacies on how students perceive and use technologies in education and daily lives.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/23476/

http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-319-28883-3_8

Source: BURO EPrints