Distress of Educators Teaching Nursing Students with Potential Learning Disabilities: A Qualitative Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Category 1: Searching for Measures Tailored to Students in a Short Period during Training
3.1.1. Subcategory 1: Conflict over Lowering Goals as a Reasonable Accommodation
3.1.2. Subcategory 2: Incompatibility with Goals to Be Achieved in the Short Term
3.1.3. Subcategory 3: Barriers to Prior Information Sharing about the Students to Consider
3.1.4. Subcategory 4: Unclear Specific Support Measures Suitable for the Students
3.1.5. Subcategory 5: Unfamiliar with Learning Disabilities and Prejudiced
3.1.6. Subcategory 6: Feelings of Experience-Oriented Veteran Clinical Practice Leaders
3.2. Category 2: Resistance to Individualized Responses That Significantly Differ from Traditional Japanese Collectivist Education
3.2.1. Subcategory 1: Learning Disabilities That Tend to Be Hidden by Students Themselves
3.2.2. Subcategory 2: Difficulty Distinguishing between Reading and Writing or Reasoning
3.2.3. Subcategory 3: Resistance to Labeling What May Be a Learning Disability
3.2.4. Subcategory 4: No Understanding of Reasonable Accommodation
3.3. Category 3: Conflict over Support Being Perceived as Favoring a Particular Student
3.3.1. Subcategory 1: Disregarding Learning Disabilities as a Mere Personal Feature
3.3.2. Subcategory 2: Adverse Effects on Student Relationships and Group Learning
3.4. Category 4: Hesitation to Identify the Limits of Students
Subcategory 1: Hesitation to Identify the Limits from the Clinical Training Experience
3.5. Category 5: Barriers in the Process of Supporting Difficulties due to the Nature of Learning Disabilities
3.5.1. Subcategory 1: Unconscious Negative Feedback
3.5.2. Subcategory 2: Lack of Solutions and Staffing Tailored to Characteristics of Students with Learning Disabilities
3.5.3. Subcategory 3: Efforts to Understand the Characteristics of Students with Learning Disabilities and Build a Relationship of Trust
3.5.4. Subcategory 4: Not Being Able to Cooperate
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Time (Minutes) * | Implementation Details |
---|---|
Before starting | Check audio and web camera when connecting online, and secure a relaxing environment |
4 | Introduction: Greetings, explanation of research outline, and confirmation of consent to research cooperation |
3 | Checking the definition of learning disabilities and how to proceed with online focus group interviews |
3 | Participant self-introduction |
25 | Question 1. What do you think about the difficulties involved in working with nursing students who may have learning disabilities? |
25 | Question 2. What do you think about learning support in clinical training for nursing students who may have learning disabilities? |
25 | Question 3. What do you think about supporting the career selection of nursing students who may have learning disabilities? |
5 | Summary and upcoming information |
Categories | Subcategories |
---|---|
Searching for measures tailored to students in a short period during training | Conflict to lower goals as a reasonable accommodation |
Incompatibility with goals to be achieved in the short term | |
Barriers to prior information-sharing about the students to consider | |
Unclear specific support measures suitable for the students | |
Unfamiliar with learning disabilities and prejudiced | |
Feelings of experience-oriented veteran clinical practice leaders | |
Resistance to individualized responses that differ significantly from traditional Japanese collectivist education | Learning disabilities that tend to be hidden by students themselves |
Difficulty in distinguishing between reading and writing or reasoning | |
Resistance to labeling what may be a learning disability | |
No understanding of reasonable accommodation | |
Conflict over support being perceived as favoring a particular student | Disregarding learning disabilities as a mere personal feature |
Adverse effects on student relationships and group learning | |
Hesitation to identify the limits of students | Hesitation to identify students’ limits from the clinical training experience |
Barriers in the process of supporting difficulties due to the nature of learning disabilities | Unconscious negative feedback |
Lack of solutions and staffing tailored to the characteristics of students with learning disabilities | |
Efforts to understand the characteristics of students with learning disabilities and build a relationship of trust | |
Not being able to cooperate |
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© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Murakami, M.; Kawasaki, H.; Cui, Z.; Kokusho, H.; Kakehashi, M. Distress of Educators Teaching Nursing Students with Potential Learning Disabilities: A Qualitative Analysis. Healthcare 2023, 11, 615. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11040615
Murakami M, Kawasaki H, Cui Z, Kokusho H, Kakehashi M. Distress of Educators Teaching Nursing Students with Potential Learning Disabilities: A Qualitative Analysis. Healthcare. 2023; 11(4):615. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11040615
Chicago/Turabian StyleMurakami, Mari, Hiromi Kawasaki, Zhengai Cui, Hiroko Kokusho, and Masayuki Kakehashi. 2023. "Distress of Educators Teaching Nursing Students with Potential Learning Disabilities: A Qualitative Analysis" Healthcare 11, no. 4: 615. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11040615
APA StyleMurakami, M., Kawasaki, H., Cui, Z., Kokusho, H., & Kakehashi, M. (2023). Distress of Educators Teaching Nursing Students with Potential Learning Disabilities: A Qualitative Analysis. Healthcare, 11(4), 615. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11040615