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Reconciling Life Balance| A grounded theory study of overcoming failure

<p> Academic failure has been described as endemic in nursing education. Although, associate degree nursing programs graduate the largest number of nurses each year, the on-time graduation rate is 59%. Every semester students fail nursing courses and are required to successfully repeat the course before they can progress in the nursing program. Students who re-take a failed course are often called "repeaters." This qualitative Grounded Theory research explored the process of overcoming failure and becoming a successful student repeater. This emergent mode grounded theory study applied qualitative analysis techniques to prospectively verify and refine this emergent concept by delineating dimensions embedded in overcoming failure. Through the constant comparative method of data analysis, selective and theoretical coding, the Grounded Theory <i>Reconciling Life Balance </i> emerged. </p><p> <i>Reconciling Life Balance</i> represents the basic social-psychological process of nursing students who failed a course, repeated the course successfully and continued to complete their nursing program. Two substantive categories emerged from this data: 1) acknowledging, which included the concepts of the unexpected and failure and 2) becoming a successful repeater, which included the concepts of managing emotions, asking for help and adjusting their work-life balance. By focusing on human interaction and emotional connections, <i> Reconciling Life Balance </i> has the potential to transform current approaches to nursing education and facilitate student success.</p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:3589732
Date25 September 2013
CreatorsKarsten, Kathleen
PublisherCity University of New York
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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