Academic Mentoring And Job Satisfaction Of Baccalaureate Nursing Faculty PDF Download

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Importance of and Satisfaction with Characteristics of Mentoring Among Nursing Faculty

Importance of and Satisfaction with Characteristics of Mentoring Among Nursing Faculty
Author: Jacklyn D. Gentry
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2017
Genre: Mentoring in nursing
ISBN:

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The nursing faculty shortage and its contributing factors have been well documented in the literature. Contributory factors include lack of graduate prepared faculty, difficulty recruiting and retaining faculty, and a decrease in job satisfaction within the faculty role. The use of mentoring programs has the potential to impact the nursing faculty shortage by increasing job satisfaction while providing novice faculty with additional support during the transition from clinical nurse to nursing faculty. The purpose of the study was to examine the relationship between the importance of and satisfaction with characteristics of mentoring in full time nursing faculty teaching in baccalaureate degree programs or higher. This study aimed to determine the degree to which nursing faculty perceive the importance of characteristics of the mentor and mentoring relationship, as well as the level of satisfaction with the mentor and mentoring relationship. Benner's theory of novice to expert was used as the theoretical framework for this cross-sectional study. Full-time nursing faculty in a Midwestern state were surveyed using convenience sampling. The survey instrument consisted of demographic data, modified Perceptions of Mentoring Relationships Survey, and satisfaction with mentoring. The results were analyzed using descriptive statistics with measures of central tendency, independent t-test, and standard deviation. The results did not demonstrate a statistically significant relationship among survey items; however, mentoring characteristics that proved to be both of high importance and high satisfaction were identified. Deeper insight into the characteristics of mentoring that are of importance and produce satisfaction is essential into the development of formal mentoring programs to make positive, lasting impacts on the nursing faculty shortage.


Exploring an E-mentoring/orientation Program as a Method to Improve Nursing Faculty Job Satisfaction and Retention

Exploring an E-mentoring/orientation Program as a Method to Improve Nursing Faculty Job Satisfaction and Retention
Author: Catherine M. Jennings
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009
Genre:
ISBN:

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" According to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN, 2009b), the shortage of nursing faculty in baccalaureate and graduate nursing programs is worsening. Having been a faculty member teaching in a completely online Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) program for the past six years, it has become increasingly apparent that there is a lack of qualified nursing educators in general and graduate faculty in particular. Not only is it difficult to recruit nursing educators, retention of newly hired faculty is challenging. The faculty shortage is compromising the ability of colleges and universities across the United States to provide nursing education at all program levels (New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing [NJCCN], 2005). This in turn has a significant impact on the number of nurses that are educated to care for the increasing aged and ill population. ..." -- from Chapter 1.


An Exploration of Formal Mentoring Experiences of Junior Faculty in Associate Degree Nursing Programs

An Exploration of Formal Mentoring Experiences of Junior Faculty in Associate Degree Nursing Programs
Author: Marsha Moore Cannon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2014
Genre: Electronic dissertations
ISBN:

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The purpose of this study was to explore the formal mentoring experiences of junior nursing faculty. The nursing faculty were located in associate degree nursing programs in community colleges in the Southeast. Three broad research questions were developed to guide the study: (1) What are the lived experiences of junior faculty with formal mentoring? (2) What is the nature of the interactions that take place between mentor and mentee? (3) What meanings do the mentees assign to these interactions? A qualitative research design was used to conduct the study. The participants offered a depiction of the lived experience of the formal mentoring experiences of junior nursing faculty. The results of the data analyses indicated the nurse educators encountered struggles as they acclimated into the nurse educator role. The formal mentoring that was provided for the mentees fostered within them a sense of belonging that resulted in job satisfaction and a desire to remain in nursing education. The mentees trusted that their mentors provided the best mentoring and learning experiences for them as the mentors sat in the classroom and observed them, provided guidance with instructional development, and assisted with test construction. All of these mentor actions helped the new faculty members grow as educators. Understanding the mentoring experiences of novice nurse educators is important to nursing education. Nursing faculty members leave education for a myriad of reasons including salary, stress, unclear role expectations, and job satisfaction. Job satisfaction greatly influences a faculty member's decision to remain in nursing education. The retention of qualified nurse educators is crucial to overcoming the nursing faculty shortage, and a means to address this problem is the mentoring of new educators. The study findings affirmed the positive nature of formal mentoring when examining the experiences of junior nurse educators.