A clinical ladder program based on Carper's Fundamental Patterns of Knowing in Nursing. Clinical and career ladder programs were popular adjuncts to recruitment and retention during the nursing shortage of the 1980s. Programs commonly used Ben......
A Cli- nical Ladder Program Based on Carper's Fundamental Patterns of Knowing in Nursing. J Nurs Adm. 2003; 33(3): 146- 152.A Clinical Ladder Program Based on Carper’s Fundamental Patterns of Knowing in Nursing[J] . Lee A. Schmidt,Deana Nelson,Leah Godfrey.JONA: The Journal of...
The Feelings of Knowing - Fundamental Interoceptive Patterns (FoK-FIP) is a transdisciplinary theory developed to explain elusive phenomena suspected to ex... H Pollard-Wright - 《Communicative & Integrative Biology》 被引量: 0发表: 2022年
Knowing that motor skills will not develop to their full potential without opportunities to practice in environments that are stimulating and supportive, we evaluated the effect of a physical activity (PA)-based intervention targeting childcare providers on fundamental movement skills (FMS) in preschooler...
Understandingis thecomprehension of facts or knowledge that has been gathered. This is the need to make sense of facts, to find meaning in data, to get knowledge, and to find patterns that explain nature. Scientists come up with hypotheses and theories to try to understand the world through ...
Understandingis thecomprehension of facts or knowledge that has been gathered. This is the need to make sense of facts, to find meaning in data, to get knowledge, and to find patterns that explain nature. Scientists come up with hypotheses and theories to try to understand the world through ...
Fundamental patterns of knowing in nursing: the challenge of evidence-based practice. This article reconsiders the fundamental patterns of knowing in nursing in light of the challenge of narrow empirics in the form of evidence-based practice... S Porter - 《Advances in Nursing Science》 被引量:...
Professional culture might shape the interorganizational exchange of personal information in a health and social care context. A simplified model of possible information-sharing behaviors (“ideal”, “over-open”, “over-cautious”, and “chaotic”) can be explored to suggest that patterns of ...