List Books » Teaching Technologies in Nursing and the Health Professions: Beyond Simulation and Online Courses
Authors: Wanda Bonnel, Katharine Smith
ISBN-13: 9780826118479, ISBN-10: 082611847X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company, Incorporated
Date Published: April 2010
Edition: New Edition
Wanda Bonnel, PhD, RN, is Associate Professor at the University of Kansas School of Nursing where she has taught for over 20 years. Currently, she teaches graduate level courses in Teaching with Technologies, Foundations in Education and Learning, and Teaching Strategies, Creating a Learning Environment, among others. She is a Fellow in the National League for Nursing Academy, the recipient of the Kemper Teaching Award at University of Kansas, and the Sigma Theta Tau Regional Pinnacle Award for Computer-Based Professional Education Technology. Dr. Bonnel has been the PI on five funded grants and research projects, including Best Practices in Feedback to Online Students and Online Course Feedback, What Do We Mean (both funded by NLN). She has published 22 Peer Reviewed Abstracts and Articles and contributed 6 invited chapters or articles to edited works, the majority of which have focused on aspects of nursing education. A certified geriatric nurse practitioner, Dr. Bonnel is a grant reviewer for NLN and HRSA, an Editorial Board Member of the Journal of Gerontological Nursing, and a manuscript reviewer for International Journal of Nursing Education Scholarship and Journal of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners.
Katharine Smith, PhD, RN, is Associate Professor and Assistant Dean for Program Evaluation at the University of Missouri, Kansas City where she has taught since 1991. Dr. Smith's research has included 17 funded grants, most of which focused on some aspect of teaching, advanced education, and nursing traineeships. Professional presentations include international and national posters and oral presentations focusing on Simulation and Ethical Issues related to health care. Dr. Smith is published primarily in the area of nursing ethics, and serves as a Consultant Editor for Nursing Ethics: An International Journal for Health Care Professionals. Her clinical nursing career has focused on cardiovascular nursing, including CNS work in Cardiac Rehabilitation.
Health information technology is now the top priority for improving nursing and health care by informing clinical care, interconnecting clinicians, personalizing care, and improving population health at large. This book presents a broad range of cutting-edge teaching technologies and a detailed overview of teaching and learning pedagogical concepts that are relevant across a variety of teaching environments. Helpful to both new and seasoned educators, these "must-know" strategies allow faculty to keep pace with the rapidly changing digital world.
The book helps to guide faculty in making thoughtful, informed decisions on how and where to integrate technology into learning environments. A major feature of this book is the Integrated Learning Triangle for Teaching with Technologies, a faculty tool to help determine if and how specific technologies can promote student learning. Other important chapter pedagogy includes best teaching practices, teaching and learning self-assessment tools, useful tips for faculty such as "making teaching easier," and reflective questions and activities for the reader.
Key Topics:
Contributors Evidence-Based Review Abstracts
Contributors Case Examples
Reviewers
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
SECTION I: CONCEPTS FOR TEACHING AND LEARNING ACROSS DIVERSE TECHNOLOGIES
1 What Does It Mean to Teach With Technology? 3
2 Keeping Up With Changing Technology, Self-Directed Learning, and Lifelong Learning 15
3 Theory and Teaching Technologies 31
4 Technology Teaching and Lesson Planning 45
5 Computer and Information Literacy: Gaining and Using the Evidence With Technology 61
SECTION II: FACULTY AS LEARNING FACILITATORS WITH TECHNOLOGY
6 Technologies and Effective Communication 79
7 Technology Teaching Strategies and Building the Learning Community 93
8 Technologies and Active Learning 107
9 Feedback, Debriefing, and Evaluation With Technology 123
SECTION III: DIVERSE CLINICAL PRACTICE AND EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGIES
10 Online Education and Diverse Teaching and Learning Opportunities 141
11 The Changing Classroom and Technology 161
12 Simulation and Clinical Learning 175
13 Pedagogies, Technology, and Clinical Data Management 191
14 Pedagogy, Technology, and Clinical Education 207
15 Into the Future: Nurse Educators, Teaching Technologies, and Self-Directed Lifelong Learning 229
Appendix A: New Technology Readiness Inventory 243
Appendix B: Integrated Learning Triangle for Teaching With Technologies 245
Index 249