TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title Page … … … … … … … i
Approval Page … … … … … … … … ii
Certification … … … … … … … iii
Dedication … … … … … … … … iv
Acknowledgement … … … … … v
Table of Contents … … … … … … … vi
List of Tables … … … … … … ix
List of Figures … … … … … … xi
Abstract … … … … … … … xii
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
Background of the Study … … … … … 1
Statement of the Problem … … … … … … 4
The Purpose of the Study … … … … 5
The Objectives of the Study … … … … … … 5
Research Questions … … … … … … 6
The Significance of the Study … … … … … … 6
Scope of Study … … … … … … … 7
Operational Definition of Terms … … … … … 7
CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE
REVIEW
Brief History and Trends of Nursing Education … … 9
Factors Affecting Nursing Education … … … … 12
The Concept of Curriculum and Curriculum Implementation … … 15
Factors Affecting Implementation of Curriculum … … 17
Classroom Management in Curriculum Implementation … … … … 17
Educators in Curriculum Implementation … … … … 18
Classroom Environment in Curriculum Implementation … … 20
Students in Curriculum Implementation … … … 21
Resource Materials in Curriculum Implementation … … … 21
Resource Centre in Curriculum Implementation … … … 24
Theoretical Framework … … … … … 26
Cognitive Theory … … … … … … 28
Empirical Review of Related Literature … … … 34
Curriculum for Generic Nursing Education in Nigeria … … 35
Curriculum Objectives of Generic Nursing Education … … 36
Summary of Reviewed Literature … … … … 38
CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY
Research Design … … … … … … 39
Are of Study … … … … … … 39
Population of the Study … … … … … 40
Sample … … … … … … … … 40
Sampling Procedure … … … … … … 41
Instrument for Data Collection … … … … 42
Validity of Instrument … … … … … 42
Reliability of Instrument … … … … … … 43
Ethical Consideration … … … … … … 43
Procedure for Data Collection … … … … … … 44
Method of Data Analysis … … … … … … 45
CHAPTER FOUR: DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS
Demographics of Respondents … … … … … 46
Summary of Findings … … … … … … 80
CHAPTER FIVE: DISCUSSION OF MAJOR FINDINGS
Discussion … … … … … … … 86
Limitation of Study … … … 92
Suggestion for Further Studies … … … … … 92
Recommendations … … … … … … 92
Summary … … … … … … … 93
Conclusion … … … … … 94
BIBLIOGRAPHY
APPENDICES
LIST OF TABLES
Table 1: Figures and symbols used extensively
in he research report … 46
Table 2 Percentage returns of
questionnaire/interview questions administered to research subjects (educators, students and Heads of
Department HODs) 46
Table 3: Students
Demographic Characteristics … … … … 47
Table 4: Educators Demographics … … … … … … 48
Table 5: Response scores for educators question 12- what type of manpower problems do you have? … … … … 50
Table 6: Response scores for Educators question 19 – what is the teacher – student ratio in a teaching class? … … … 51
Table 7: Response scores for educators question 14 – what are the problems of material resources … … … … 52
Table 8: Response scores for educators question 16 – what are the problems of physical facilities/infrastructure? … … 53
Table 9: Response scores for educators question 21 – what are the problems of practical Demonstration? … … … 55
Table 10: Response scores for educators question 22 – what is demonstrator – Student ratio? … … … 57
Table 11: Response scores for educators question 24 – what are the problems for clinical posting and training? … … 58
Table 12: Response scores for educators question 18 – what are the problems of classroom teaching? … … … 60
Table 13: Response scores for educators question 14 – what are the problems in students examination … … … … 61
Table 14: Response scores for educators question 28 – what are administration difficulties faced by educators? … … 62
Table 15: Students’ response to manpower Problems 63
Table 16: Students’ response to problems of
material resources … … 65
Table 17: Responses of students to physical
facilities/infrastructure problem … 66
Table 18: Practical demonstration problems
identified by students … … … 68
Table 19: Clinical posting and training problems
identified by students … 70
Table 20: Responses of students to classroom
learning problems … … 72
Table 21: Problems of private study identified by
Students … … … 74 Table 22: Problems students face in course examination … … … 75
Table 23: Responses from Heads of Department … … 76
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure
1: Student Perception Motivation
Model … … … … 32
Figure
2: Conceptual Model … … … … … … … 33
ABSTRACT
This study
focused on assessment of implementation of generic nursing curriculum in selected
Nigerian universities. It particularly focused on identifying the difficulties
associated with implementation of the generic nursing curriculum by nurse
educators and students and exploring the opinions of Heads of Department on the
implementation of the generic nursing curriculum.
Purposive
sampling was used to select the universities. Stratified sampling was used to
select proportionate size of students from 300, 400, and 500 levels. Simple
random sampling was used to select the students. All the available nurse
educators were used for the study. The
data for this study was collected using two sets of structured questionnaire,
one for nurse educators and the other for students, and in depth interview for
the heads of the department, developed and validated by the researcher. The
questionnaires were administered on the spot in the class setting to both
lecturers and students as well as individually to lecturers in their offices. The
interview questions were mailed to the heads of department with areas of
emphasis highlighted to serve as guide and prevent wandering away from the
research topic. The responses to the questionnaires were presented as
frequencies and their percentages on tables, while the responses from the
interview questions were categorised, coded and presented on tables. The data
from the quantitative and qualitative study were triangulated to bring out the
facts. The result of the findings showed that there is acute shortage of
academic staff in the implementation of the generic nursing curriculum in all
the universities used for the study. The major manpower/personnel problems
identified are inadequate number of lecturers (100%) and (80.9%) for nurse
educators and students respectively, inadequate number of clinical instructors
in the clinical areas and inadequate number of practical demonstrators in the
school. The findings also showed that there are difficulties with material
resources in the implementation of the generic nursing curriculum. The major
difficulties are inadequate number of computers, inadequate classrooms (92.9%)
and (94.8%) for nurse educators and students, and inadequate equipment in
nursing/midwifery laboratory. Nurse educators encounter difficulties with teaching in the implementation of the generic nursing
curriculum. Major problems identified are too many courses in the curriculum,
inadequate number of teaching aids, and excessive work load (91.7%) each.
Students encounter difficulties with learning
in the implementation of the generic nursing curriculum. Major problems
identified are lecture overload (80.5%), and lack of audio-visuals. Major
difficulties in clinical posting are insufficient clinical experience (75.6%),
lack of cooperation from nurses working in the clinical area (71.4%), absence
of clinical instructors/preceptors, and difficulty in transportation of students
to the clinical areas (74.2%). The major administrative problems encountered in
the implementation of generic nursing curriculum are inadequate funding (100%),
inadequate staff training and development (81.8%) and inadequate incentive for
staff (72.7%). Based on the findings of this study, it is recommended among
others that departments of nursing should endeavour to ensure that the
necessary manpower and personnel are in place for the effective and successful
implementation of the curriculum. Material resources should be made available
and the university authority should ensure that teachers and students alike
have easy access to these materials; emphasis should be laid on ensuring that
the library is properly equipped, provision of ICT materials which include
computers and audio-visual learning aids, as well as provision of equipment in
the nursing laboratory, midwifery laboratory, and the provision of
instructional materials in the resource centre of the institution. Lecture time
should be properly planned.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background to the Study
Education
is absolutely essential in the development of any country. It is an
indispensable factor in the modern search for the solution of man’s problems.
Curriculum is the crux of the whole educational process. Without curriculum no
educational endeavour can be conceived (Neeraja, 2007). Curriculum according to
Neeraja (2007) is a systematic and planned series of intended learning
conceived to be imparted through selected, planned, organised and sequential
learning experiences for a defined group of learners to attain the stated aims
of a particular educational programme. It is a blue print or plan of the school
that includes the experiences for the learners to encounter.
According
to Offorma (1994), teachers set up learning opportunities aimed at enabling
learners acquire the desired knowledge, skills, and values specified in the
curriculum.
Curriculum
implementation which is the focus of this study is the translation of
curriculum plan into practice (Offorma, 1994). After the curriculum has been
planned and developed, the next line of action is normally done in the
classroom (which by extension includes laboratories, libraries, workshops,
studios, playfields) by the joint efforts of the teachers and the learners in
the execution of an educational programme (Akpochafo and Filho,2006).
In the
United States, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) has
maintained the baccalaureate system of nursing education for transforming the
health system and how health care professionals are educated (AACN, 2008). The
global community has embraced BNSc (Bachelor of Nursing Science) as the entry
point to the profession. The entry point into the nursing profession in
Australia ,Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Ireland, Finland, Italy, Spain, Norway,
Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, and Philippines is the BNSc (Etowa,2012).
University
education in Nigeria, as it is the case in other developing countries has a
specific mission of producing graduates grounded in the key generic skills, who
on the basis of the high-quality higher education they offer would provide the
needed catalyst for the nations socio-political and economic development. According
to Akpochafo and Filho (2006), Nigerian universities at present are not
producing high quality graduates.
Many
factors in the teaching-learning environment may make it difficult for a
teacher to effectively implement the planned curriculum. These factors may be
in the learners, classroom situation, teacher and physical environment. The
National Universities Commission (NUC) observed that in both Federal and State
owned universities enrolment far outstrips the capacity to cater for enrolees
(Akpochafo and Filho, 2006). This has
the capacity to mar the implementation of curriculum when there are
insufficient facilities and manpower to cater for the students.
A study of
the graduate labour market found that employers believe “university graduates
are poorly trained and unproductive on the job and short comings are particularly
severe in oral and written communication and in applied technical skills” (Dabalen,
Oni, and Adekola, 2001).
Generic
nursing education is a formally recognised programme of study in a university
providing learners with the opportunity to acquire, integrate, apply, and
synthesise knowledge in the delivery of nursing care and preparation for post
basic education in nursing specialties or advanced nursing practice (Happell,
2009). Baccalaureate nursing education is therefore a systematic and planned
programme of study in the university through which learners are exposed to
various experiences of art and science basic to nursing to help them in
delivering evidence-based care that is holistic in nature.
In recent
years the education of nurses has been the subject of considerable interest
within and outside the profession because of the increasing complexity of
modern health services and demands made on the education of nurses. This has
led to various reforms in nursing education worldwide. Passage of the
Comprehensive Nurse Training Act in 1964 prompted the American Nurses
Association (ANA) Committee on Education to study nursing education, practice
and scope of responsibilities. At the time, the study recognised the increasing
complexity of health care and changes in practice, raising concerns about
hospital – based diploma education programmes. Subsequently, in 1965, the ANA
Board of Directors adopted the Committee on Education’s statement which became
the ANA’s “position paper” and contained the recommendation that the minimum
preparation for beginning professional nursing practice should be baccalaureate
degree education in nursing, (American Nurses Association, 2013). In 2004, the
American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) Board of Directors
reaffirmed its position that baccalaureate education is the minimum level
required for entry into professional nursing practice (American Association of
Colleges of Nursing, 2008).In the United Kingdom, a fundamental shift in the
approach to nursing education was initiated by the recommendation of the
Project 2000 report. One of its recommendations was that nursing education
should be part of university education (Akinsanya, 2001).
In Nigeria,
nursing profession took a tremendous leap with the establishment of the
Department of Nursing at the University of Ibadan in 1965. The purpose of the
programme was to produce teachers and administrators to meet the needs of the
rapidly expanding health services in Nigeria and Africa as a whole. This
programme has metamorphosed into generic nursing education in universities
offering nursing education programme in Nigeria (Ajibade, 2012). This demands a
curriculum in which a broad liberal arts education is balanced with the natural
and behavioural sciences. The curriculum for the generic nursing education in
Nigeria University programme is developed by individual universities, but with
National Universities Commission (NUC) and Nursing and Midwifery Council of
Nigeria (NMCN) benchmark as the basis for the development of the curriculum in
respective universities. It is a five – year programme of study in nursing
comprising courses for basic nursing, midwifery, and bachelor of nursing
science
Many factors can be responsible for the
ineffective implementation of the curriculum, which will no doubt affect the
quality of the product as well as the overall health system. It is therefore pertinent to investigate the
problems that militate against effective implementation of generic nursing
curriculum in Nigerian Universities.
Statement of
the Problem