HYBRID EVENT: You can participate in person at Baltimore, Maryland, USA or Virtually from your home or work.

8th Edition of Nursing World Conference

October 17-19, 2024 | Baltimore, USA

October 17 -19, 2024 | Baltimore, USA
NWC 2018

Malliga Jambulingam

Speaker at Nursing Conferences - Malliga Jambulingam
Morgan State University, United States
Title : Self-awareness of civility among nursing faculty in creating a positive learning environment

Abstract:

Background: Students learn most effectively in environments that facilitate learning by encouraging and supporting and making them feel they are part of the team. If the classroom environment is unpredictable, unstructured and overwhelming, students can be left with feelings of vulnerability and anxiety. Each faculty member is responsible for being a positive professional role model and setting the best example for students in the classroom for the safe and open exchange of ideas. It is essential for the faculty to be aware of his/her civil behavior in front of students in the classroom.  Although self-awareness of the faculty is the strongest predictor of overall success of the students’ learning in the classroom, no research has systematically examined the faculty’s self- awareness of civil behavior.

Objective: To examine nurse faculty’s awareness of their civil behaviors in creating a positive learning environment (PLE)

Method: An exploratory descriptive research design utilizing an online web-based survey as a means of exploring the perceptions of nurse-faculty of their civil behaviors in the classroom in creating a PLE. Data was collected using the demographic questionnaire and “Civility Index for Faculty”, self-report questionnaire consisting of 20 items on nurse faculty’s civil behaviors in Creating a PLE.

Data Analysis: Descriptive statistics - to describe the demographic variables and total score of civility. Correlations between demographic variables (age, education, years of nursing experience, years in teaching nursing students); and tests of differences across demographic variables (ethnicity and education) and their awareness of civil behavior in the classroom in creating a PLE

Results: Findings revealed that nurse faculty are aware of their civil behavior that they are very civil (74%), civil (23%), and moderately civil (3%) in order to create a PLE.

Conclusion/Implications: This information is instrumental for raising awareness among nurse faculty and determine strengths and opportunities for civility improvement whereby nurse faculty’s professional behaviors towards classroom and students would be appreciative in order to create and enhance a PLE for students. Faculty’s civil behavior foster positive faculty-student relationships that would empower positive learning environment.

Biography:

Malliga Jambulingam has pursued PhD in nursing at the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB), Galveston, Texas in 2014. Presently, she has been working as a PhD Nursing Program coordinator/Asst. Professor and teaching for BSN, MSN, and PhD level courses at the Morgan State University (MSU)-Nursing Programs, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. She has 27 years of experience in nursing. Her research interests are global health and nursing students’ achievement. She has been involved with Maryland Department of Health Research project on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) prevention. She is appointed as an onsite evaluator by the National League for Nursing, (NLN – CNEA).

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