Paper
Tuesday, November 15, 2005
This presentation is part of : Teaching/Learning Strategies
The Use of Deliberative Discussion as a Teaching Strategy to Enhance the Critical Thinking Abilities of First Year Nursing Students
Heather Janiszewski Goodin, RN, MScN, School of Nursing, Capital University, Columbus, OH, USA
Learning Objective #1: Understand the teaching method of deliberative discussion in nursing
Learning Objective #2: Determine the effectiveness of deliberative discussion as a teaching method to enhance critical thinking ability among nursing students

The ability to critically think is an essential quality needed in today's nurses. Nurse educators are challenged to employ teaching methods that provide nursing students with the opportunity to practice and enhance their critical thinking skills. Deliberative discussion is one such teaching method that invites participants to engage in a shared inquiry regarding public issues. The conceptual framework was developed to illustrate how the practices of dialogue, questioning, and active engagement within deliberative discussions assist learners to practice and enhance their critical thinking. The purpose of this pretest-posttest control group experimental study was to investigate the effects of using the deliberative discussion method teaching strategy to enhance the critical thinking abilities of first year Nursing students. All First year nursing students in a baccalaureate nursing program at a small, private university were invited to participate (N = 71) and completed pretest and posttest data were collected on 23 nursing students. Participants were randomly assigned to attend three deliberative discussion sessions over a 15 week period or to the control group. Using the California Critical Thinking Skills Test, the researcher found that there was no difference in critical thinking scores between the deliberative discussion group (n = 7) and the control group (n = 16). However, the quality and depth of students' critical thinking abilities during the deliberative discussions did increase from session one to session three. Findings have implications for nurse educators to help them develop insight into the usefulness of deliberative discussions as a means to foster critical thinking in nursing students. Further, future longitudinal research is needed to study changes in critical thinking over longer periods of time using the deliberative discussion method.