Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Primary |
Self-Efficacy - Competence Scale |
The scale was developed by Sherer et al. (1982). The scale, which does not belong to any subjective domain, measures the general perception of self-efficacy - efficacy. The scale consists of 23 items and four subscales. The subscales of the scale are respectively; These are "beginning the behavior", "maintaining the behavior", "Completing the behavior" and "Combating the obstacles". For each item; It is a five-point Likert-type scale as 1 = does not describe me at all, 2 = describes me a little, 3 = is undecided, 4 = describes me well, 5 = describes me very well. A score between 23 and 115 can be obtained from the scale. A high total score from the scale indicates that the individual's self-efficacy-efficacy perception is at a good level. The validity and reliability of the Turkish version of the scale was performed by Gözüm and Aksayan (1999). |
immediately after training on nasogastic tube insertion and practice in the laboratory |
|
Primary |
Student Satisfaction and Self-Confidence Scale in Learning |
The scale was developed by Jeffries and Rizzolo (2006) as 13 items to measure students' simulation activity and self-confidence in learning. Answering the scale for each item; 1=Strongly Disagree, 2=Disagree, 3=Undecided, 4=Agree, 5=Strongly Agree (Franklin et al., 2014). The Turkish validity and reliability study of the scale was carried out by Unver et al. (2017) and the total number of items decreased to 12. |
immediately after the debriefing session |
|
Primary |
Clinical Decision Making Scale in Nursing |
The Nursing Clinical Decision Making Scale was developed by Jenkins (1983) for nursing students. This scale defines how nursing students perceive clinical decision making based on their own statements. The scale consists of 40 items and four subscales. The subscales of the scale are respectively; These are "Exploring options and ideas", "Exploring goals and values", "Evaluating results", and "Searching for information and adopting new information objectively". Each subscale consists of 10 items. Each item of the scale is evaluated as 5=Always, 4=Often, 3=Sometimes, 2=Rarely, 1=Never. A high score from the scale indicates a high perception of decision making (Jenkins, 1983; Jenkins, 2001). The Turkish validity and reliability of the scale was done by Durmaz Edeer and Sarikaya (2015). |
immediately after training on nasogastic tube insertion and practice in the laboratory |
|
Primary |
Nasogastric Tube Placement Checklist |
The Child Checklist was prepared by the researchers based on the literature (Bindler et al., 2014). The skill performance of the student will be evaluated over a total of 100 points, by scoring each application step according to the degree of importance. |
During the application (experimental group= in the simulation laboratory; control group= in the skill laboratory |
|
Secondary |
Self-Efficacy - Competence Scale |
The scale was developed by Sherer et al. (1982). The scale, which does not belong to any subjective domain, measures the general perception of self-efficacy - efficacy. The scale consists of 23 items and four subscales. The subscales of the scale are respectively; These are "beginning the behavior", "maintaining the behavior", "Completing the behavior" and "Combating the obstacles". For each item; It is a five-point Likert-type scale as 1 = does not describe me at all, 2 = describes me a little, 3 = is undecided, 4 = describes me well, 5 = describes me very well. A score between 23 and 115 can be obtained from the scale. A high total score from the scale indicates that the individual's self-efficacy-efficacy perception is at a good level. The validity and reliability of the Turkish version of the scale was performed by Gözüm and Aksayan (1999). |
immediately after the debriefing session |
|
Secondary |
Clinical Decision Making Scale in Nursing |
The Nursing Clinical Decision Making Scale was developed by Jenkins (1983) for nursing students. This scale defines how nursing students perceive clinical decision making based on their own statements. The scale consists of 40 items and four subscales. The subscales of the scale are respectively; These are "Exploring options and ideas", "Exploring goals and values", "Evaluating results", and "Searching for information and adopting new information objectively". Each subscale consists of 10 items. Each item of the scale is evaluated as 5=Always, 4=Often, 3=Sometimes, 2=Rarely, 1=Never. A high score from the scale indicates a high perception of decision making (Jenkins, 1983; Jenkins, 2001). The Turkish validity and reliability of the scale was done by Durmaz Edeer and Sarikaya (2015). |
immediately after the debriefing session |
|