Twenty-seven first-year nursing students, divided across six focus groups formed on the basis of their past chemistry experience, were interviewed about their chemistry experience as a component of a Health Science unit. Information related to learning and academic performance was able to be established from student conversations resulting in three themes (and associated categories): Connectivity (curriculum. application, and social interaction); Reductivity (nature of chemistry. exposition. and control of learning); and Reflexivity (confidence. anxiety, and goal orientation). The framework proved useful in portraying relationships between themes for conversations related to tutorial sessions, prior knowledge, and chemistry in nursing. The ...
Background\ud \ud Professional nursing practice is informed by biological, social and behavioural sc...
Nursing students have reported bioscience to be challenging and difficult to understand. This may ha...
This paper explores the perceptions and experiences of lecturers and undergraduate nursing students ...
Nursing students have typically found the study of chemistry to be one of their major challenges in ...
Nurses require an understanding of biological sciences but may fear chemistry. We quantified attitud...
Students enrolled in the Bachelor of Nursing program come with diverse academic abilities, age, lang...
Attitude to the subject of chemistry was quantified in first-year undergraduate nursing students, at...
Abstract Despite the value given to the teaching of bioscience as a central component of undergradua...
Previous research has established that students with a limited science background find chemistry dif...
Students enrolled in the Bachelor of Nursing program come with diverse academic abilities, age, lang...
AbstractIn prior work, we have been developing a conceptual framework, called the Perspectives of Ch...
Aims and objectives To identify how science should be taught to nursing students, and by whom. B...
Nursing students of the Good Samaritan School of Nursing work with substances in the chemistry lab.h...
This study investigates how students and faculty members define chemistry as well as students\u27 vi...
In order to better understand the factors that contribute toward difficulties learning chemistry, a ...
Background\ud \ud Professional nursing practice is informed by biological, social and behavioural sc...
Nursing students have reported bioscience to be challenging and difficult to understand. This may ha...
This paper explores the perceptions and experiences of lecturers and undergraduate nursing students ...
Nursing students have typically found the study of chemistry to be one of their major challenges in ...
Nurses require an understanding of biological sciences but may fear chemistry. We quantified attitud...
Students enrolled in the Bachelor of Nursing program come with diverse academic abilities, age, lang...
Attitude to the subject of chemistry was quantified in first-year undergraduate nursing students, at...
Abstract Despite the value given to the teaching of bioscience as a central component of undergradua...
Previous research has established that students with a limited science background find chemistry dif...
Students enrolled in the Bachelor of Nursing program come with diverse academic abilities, age, lang...
AbstractIn prior work, we have been developing a conceptual framework, called the Perspectives of Ch...
Aims and objectives To identify how science should be taught to nursing students, and by whom. B...
Nursing students of the Good Samaritan School of Nursing work with substances in the chemistry lab.h...
This study investigates how students and faculty members define chemistry as well as students\u27 vi...
In order to better understand the factors that contribute toward difficulties learning chemistry, a ...
Background\ud \ud Professional nursing practice is informed by biological, social and behavioural sc...
Nursing students have reported bioscience to be challenging and difficult to understand. This may ha...
This paper explores the perceptions and experiences of lecturers and undergraduate nursing students ...