(Answered) NR501NP Week 2: Ways of Knowing (Orig Post Due Wednesday, Responses Due Sunday)


COURSE  

NR501NP Theoretical Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice


Preparing the Assignment

Nursing knowledge is classified in a variety of ways, one of which is Carper’s Patterns of Knowing (Carper, 1978). Carper’s framework offers a lens through which the nurse can reflect upon insights acquired through empirical, ethical, personal, and aesthetic knowledge (Carper, 1978). Through intentional reflection using Carper’s Patterns of Knowing, nurses can process experiential learning and knowledge acquired through practice. The purpose of this assignment is to reflect upon a specific practice situation and better understand the professional knowledge and insights obtained through that experience.

Criteria for Content

  1. Think of a surprising or challenging practice situation in which you felt underprepared, unprepared, or uncomfortable.
  2. Select an important nursing issue/topic that was inherent to the identified situation.
  3. Briefly explain the situation.
  4. Identify the nursing issue inherent in the identified situation
    1. As a method of refection, use Carper’s Patterns of Knowing to analyze the situation. In your discussion, address ONE of the following Patterns of Knowing:
      1. What do you think was the underlying reason for the situation? (Esthetics)
      2. What were your thoughts and feeling in the situation? (Personal)
      3. What was one personal belief that impacted your actions? (Ethics)
      4. What evidence in nursing literature supports the nursing importance of the identified issue? (Empirical)
  5. What new insights did you gain through this reflective practice opportunity? How will this apply to your practice as a nurse practitioner? Be sure to use scholarly literature to support your position.

ANSWER  

During one of my first weeks practicing on my own as a new graduate nurse off of orientation, I found myself in an uncomfortable situation with a patient who was agitated and verbally abusive to both myself and the other staff. I remember the situation clearly, as I was still a new nurse who had never encountered a patient this angry, and I found myself unsure and underprepared on how to handle the situation. The patient had just been brought to the floor from the emergency room, and I was in the room alone with the patient asking him questions trying to complete his admission.……please click the icon below to purchase full answer at $10