Week 8: The Role of the DNP Scholar in Preparing for Change

Week 8: The Role of the DNP Scholar in Preparing for Change: Reflect on the need to improve outcomes in healthcare and consider the following. How might a large cadre of nursing practice and research scholars’ impact change…

This is a graded discussion: 50 points possible

due Feb 14

Week 8: The Role of the DNP Scholar in Preparing for Change

Reflect on the need to improve outcomes in healthcare and consider the following.

· How might a large cadre of nursing practice and research scholars’ impact change?

· How might the work of this cadre translate evidence to change practice?

· How might this cadre lead clinical innovation?

· In influencing improvement outcomes at your workplace, what strategies can you implement to inspire others to embrace change? 

Please review the Graduate Discussion Grading Guidelines and Rubric  (Links to an external site.) for complete discussion requirements.

*3 Scholarly Sources , no OLDER than 5 years , in APA format and with in-Text citation 

Discussion Criteria

I. Application of Course Knowledge: The student post contributes unique perspectives or insights gleaned from personal experience or examples from the healthcare field. The student must accurately and fully discuss the topic for the week in addition to providing personal or professional examples. The student must completely answer the entire initial question.

II. Engagement in Meaningful Dialogue: The student responds to a student peer and course faculty to further dialogue.

a. Peer Response: The student responds substantively to at least one topic-related post by a student peer. A substantive post adds content or insights or asks a question that will add to the learning experience and/or generate discussion.

· A post of “I agree” with a repeat of the other student’s post does not count as a substantive post. A collection of shallow posts does not equal a substantive post.

· The peer response must occur on a separate day from the initial posting.

· The peer response must occur before Sunday, 11:59 p.m. MT. 

· The peer response does not require a scholarly citation and reference unless the information is summarized and/or direct quotes are used, in which APA style standards then apply.

b. Faculty Response: The student responds substantively to at least one question by course faculty. The faculty question may be directed to the student, to another student, or to the entire class.

· A post of “I agree” with a repeat of the faculty’s post does not count as a substantive post. A collection of shallow posts does not equal a substantive post.

· The faculty response must occur on a separate day from the initial posting.

· Responses to the faculty member must occur by Sunday, 11:59 p.m. MT.

· This response does not require a scholarly citation and reference unless the information is summarized and/or direct quotes are used, in which APA style standards then apply.

III. Integration of Evidence:

The student post provides support from a minimum of at least three (3) sources which may include assigned readings, or weekly module content, or outside scholarly sources. The scholarly source when used is: 1) evidence-based, 2) scholarly in nature, 3) published within the last 5 years, and 4) an in-text citation. The student initial response to the graded discussion must include at least 1 source. Responses to peer and/or faculty, citations and references are included when information is summarized/synthesized and/or direct quotes are used, in which APA style standards then apply.

1. It is important that student utilizes support from the literature that is grounded in the literature providing sources relevant to the discussion posting. One source may come from the online weekly content.

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2. Scholarly Sources

· Two (2) scholarly sources should be used in the discussion board assignments across the week.

· These include peer-reviewed publications.

· Textbooks are not considered scholarly sources. However, in some assignments, support from textbooks may be used on a limited basis when accompanied with additional scholarly sources if specified in the assignment guidelines or with instructor approval.

· Scholarly sources may be present in the weekly readings and students may choose to utilize these.

· Wikipedia, Wikis, .com website or blogs should not be used.

· Sources should be no more than five years old unless they are historical or seminal references or approved by your instructor.

3. Literature Sources:

· Grey literature is scholarly but not peer-reviewed. These resources can be used but do not meet requirements for peer-reviewed sources.

· Refer to the assignment guidelines to determine which grey literature sources (e.g., professional organization website, white papers) are appropriate to be used for discussions or assignments and would constitute receiving full credit for using this resource in the paper or discussion.

· Government reports are actually part of the grey literature – they are not peer reviewed and the government’s main purpose is not the publication of literature.

· Internet resources on dissertations, a form of grey literature, provide additional views on the scholarly level of this literature

· Papers written for Chamberlain College of Nursing should be the student’s original work and contain no more than one short quotation for every three pages or as designated in the assignment guidelines. Quotations should be avoided if possible.

(Chamberlain Guidelines for Writing Professional Papers, 2018)

IV. Professionalism in Communication: The post presents information in logical, meaningful, and understandable sequence, and is clearly relevant to the discussion topic. Grammar, spelling, and/or punctuation are accurate.

V. Wednesday Participation Requirement: The student provides a substantive response to the graded discussion question(s) or topic(s), posted by the course faculty (not a response to a peer), by Wednesday, 11:59 p.m. MT of each week.

VI. Total Participation Requirement: The student provides at least three substantive posts (one to the initial question or topic, one to

a student peer, and one to a faculty question) on two different days during the week.

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Regards,

Cathy, CS.