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Transitioning to university as a nursing student: Thematic analysis of written reflections

Authors :
Janet Ellis
Jane Griffiths
Bernie Hannity
Steven Pryjmachuk
Caitlin McWilliams
Source :
Pryjmachuk, S, McWilliams, C, Hannity, B, Ellis, J & Griffiths, J 2018, ' Transitioning to university as a nursing student: Thematic analysis of written reflections ', Nurse Education Today . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2018.12.003
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

BackgroundThe international literature has largely conceptualised transition to university as a process of adjustment to both the social and the academic demands of university life. Several factors influence this process including: student, parent and university staff expectations; student preparedness; and student belongingness. Moreover, some student groups (groups well-represented in nursing) appear to have particular difficulty in successfully transitioning to university life.Study AimsTo explore first year nursing students' experiences of the transition to university; to compare nursing students' experiences with those of other disciplines and identify ways of easing the transition for nursing students.MethodologyAs part of their coursework, first year nursing students at an English University submitted a 500-word, formative reflection on the transition to university. Anonymised reflections from 161 students were available to the researchers for thematic content analysis; 50 reflections, however, proved sufficient for ‘information power’.ResultsTwo main themes emerged from the data: (i) ‘managing expectations’, an overarching theme that permeated most of the reflections; and (ii) ‘practical tools and support aids’, the practical, concrete actions that either the university took, or the students developed themselves, to ease the transition. Both themes embraced inter-related academic, social and personal domains.ConclusionsNursing students' transition experiences are similar to those of other university students. However, the particular demographics of nursing student cohorts amplifies certain aspects of the transition experience: more students who are likely to struggle with transition but also more students who embrace the developmental aspects of going to university. Transition requires joint enterprise between students and university staff, especially in terms of expectations and the support required to become independent learners. Transitions can be eased by tapping into student resourcefulness and seeing transition as a gradual process that cuts across academic, social and personal dimensions rather than as a short, one-off event.

Details

ISSN :
02606917
Volume :
74
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nurse Education Today
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....908f2ee09933cad619a5ae826f641847
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2018.12.003