Home Preceptor Selection, Orientation, and Evaluation in Baccalaureate Nursing Education
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Preceptor Selection, Orientation, and Evaluation in Baccalaureate Nursing Education

  • Tanya K Altmann
Published/Copyright: January 12, 2006

The benefits obtained from properly managed clinical preceptorships cannot be underestimated. Nursing students benefit from clinical preceptors who exemplify the application of theoretical knowledge in actual clinical settings. Preceptorships, and the use of preceptors, remain a viable and important adjunct for faculty in US schools of nursing. This article reports on a portion of a study of undergraduate baccalaureate nursing programs and the use, selection, and evaluation of clinical preceptors. The results suggest that the design of most preceptorship programs does not consistently secure the use of qualified clinical preceptors. Today's clinical preceptors need to be more carefully selected, oriented, and evaluated to ensure quality education of nursing students. Benefits can be realized not only in nursing education, but also in nursing practice, patient care, and nursing administration. More research needs to be done in the area of clinical preceptorships and more specifically, selection and evaluation methods.

Published Online: 2006-1-12

©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Editorial
  2. Forces of Magnetism for Nursing Education
  3. Article
  4. Preceptor Selection, Orientation, and Evaluation in Baccalaureate Nursing Education
  5. Teaching Through Storytelling: An Exemplar
  6. Influence of Nurse Characteristics on the Acquisition of Cultural Competence
  7. Using Imaginative Literature to Foster Cultural Sensitivity
  8. Solution Focused Teaching: A Transformative Approach to Teaching Nursing
  9. Conflict in the Preceptorship or Field Experience: A Rippling Tide of Silence
  10. Connecting: Perceptions of Becoming a Faculty Mentor
  11. Levels and Predictors of Knowledge and Attitudes Regarding Pain among Israeli Baccalaureate Nursing Students and Nurses Pursuing Specialty Certification
  12. Development and Psychometric Evaluation of the Eldercare Cultural Self-Efficacy Scale
  13. Selecting and Applying Taxonomies for Learning Outcomes: A Nursing Example
  14. Action Methods in the Classroom: Creative Strategies for Nursing Education
  15. Integrating Clinical Guidelines into Nursing Education
  16. Educating the Future eHealth Professional Nurse
  17. Engaging Baccalaureate Clinical Faculty
  18. Nursing EDGE: Evaluating Delegation Guidelines in Education
  19. Malaysian Registered Nurses' Professional Learning
  20. Contextual Learning: A Reflective Learning Intervention for Nursing Education
  21. End of Life Issues Action: Impact of Education
  22. Fostering Academic Success of Mexican Americans in a BSN Program: An Educational Imperative
  23. CAN-Care: An Innovative Model of Practice-Based Learning
  24. Self-Esteem, Parent-Child Interaction, Emotional Support, and Self-Perception among Thai Undergraduate Nursing Students
  25. Active Learning Strategies...Not for the Birds!
  26. Educational Competencies to Strengthen Tuberculosis Curricula in Undergraduate Nursing Programs
  27. Perceptions of Nursing Student Clinical Placement Experiences
  28. Teaching Professional Values in a BSN Program
  29. Career Intentions of Nursing Students and New Nurse Graduates: A Review of the Literature
  30. Evaluating Critical Thinking in Clinical Concept Maps: A Pilot Study
  31. Reusable Learning Units: An Innovative Teaching Strategy for Online Nursing Education
Downloaded on 9.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.2202/1548-923X.1014/html
Scroll to top button