What Attracts Nurse Faculty & What Attracts Nurse Faculty & What Keeps Them in Education? What Keeps Them in Education? Preliminary findings Preliminary findings Jane D. Evans BSN RN MHA Jane D. Evans BSN RN MHA University of Arkansas for Medical University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Sciences College of Nursing College of Nursing
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What Attracts Nurse Faculty & What Keeps Them in Education? Preliminary findings Jane D. Evans BSN RN MHA University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College.
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What Attracts Nurse Faculty & What What Attracts Nurse Faculty & What Keeps Them in Education? Keeps Them in Education?
Preliminary findingsPreliminary findings
Jane D. Evans BSN RN MHAJane D. Evans BSN RN MHA
University of Arkansas for Medical SciencesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
College of NursingCollege of Nursing
ProblemProblem
The nurse faculty shortage is growing and threatens to make the nurse shortage worse.
For example: In 2004, 11,300 qualified applicants were turned away from nursing schools primarily due to faculty shortages.
In 2005, the number exceeded
32,000!
Strategies to correct the nurse faculty shortage appear thus far to have been inadequate.
Factors in the faculty shortageFactors in the faculty shortage
• Average age of educators is 50.5 years
• Fewer nurses are choosing education careers
• Opportunities in other fields are drawing students and nurses away
• Clinical practice is more lucrative
• Increased workplace pressures make nursing education less attractive
• An intense focus on nurse faculty recruitment and retention is desperately needed.
• No work has been published that singularly and specifically addresses nurse faculty members’ beliefs about recruitment and retention.
I. A phenomenological pilot study of educators’ beliefs
II. A synthesis of the literature on nurse educator recruitment and retention
Preliminary studies
a) describe what attracts nurses to become educators
b) describe factors that keep them in their positions as educators
c) list strategies that nurse educators believe are most effective in recruiting and retaining nurse educators.
Specific aims
I.I. Phenomenological pilot study Phenomenological pilot study
• Purposive, non-probability sample– 3 university based nurse faculty members– 2 PhD, 1 MNSc– 2 women, 1 man; mean age 55.3 years– Mean years teaching, 18– Teaching BSN & MSN students– IRB approved informed consent
Pilot studyPilot study
• Methods– Semi-structured interviews– Opened with ‘How did you come to be a nurse
educator?– Audiotaped and transcribed– Ethnograph software to facilitate sorting,
coding, and content analysis.
Pilot studyPilot study
• Methods– Verbatim transcriptions were checked for
accuracy. – Transcripts were read many times.– A codebook of definitions was developed.
Pilot studyPilot study
• Analysis & Rigor- Transcripts were read and reread, and
compared for content and recurring themes.- Relevant concepts were isolated, and themes
identified.- Process repeated until no new concepts
emerged.
Pilot studyPilot study
• Analysis & Rigor- Codes, definitions, and themes were
reviewed by a panel of nurse researchers.– An expert in qualitative methodology served
as consultant. – All steps and decisions were fully
documented.
Pilot study: FindingsPilot study: Findings
Three themes emerged:
- Ideas to recruit and retain- workplace and compensation enhancement- marketing nurse education
Pilot study: FindingsPilot study: Findings
Three themes emerged:Mentoring
- a mentoring environment- help and guidance from others- role modeling- long-term connections with other nurses
Pilot study: FindingsPilot study: Findings
Three themes emerged:Obstacles to recruitment and retention
- Salary- failure to encourage and facilitate nursing
education careers- lack of role models- lack of focus on teaching- failure to consider individual needs- role strain.
Pilot study findingsPilot study findings
- Mentoring was identified by all respondents as an aspect of nearly every factor. Its importance was stressed, “How much further would we be down the road if everybody mentored more?”
Pilot study implicationsPilot study implications
– Research needed:• promoting effective mentoring
• mentoring as a recruitment/retention strategy
• which recruitment and retention strategies are effective?
• explore obstacles that impede the increase of nurse educators.
II.II. Literature Synthesis Literature Synthesis
• A detailed and integrated review of research studies on topics related to the recruitment and retention of nurse