Lesley Brook — Nov 27, 2017

Liz Ditzel teaches lateral thinking to students using "klinky boxes".

Experienced nurses engage in multiple clinical reasoning (critical thinking or problem solving) episodes for each person in their care, many times a day. Because of their knowledge, skill and experience the expert nurse may appear to perform these processes in way that seems automatic or instinctive, but clinical reasoning is a learned skill. The little things that noone else asks or notices could make a difference in diagnosis and treatment and health outcomes. 

To foster the development of student nurses’ critical thinking skills, lecturers Dr Liz Ditzel and Josie Crawley have developed a creative learning activity with a set of small wooden boxes and a children’s picture storybook. Students are placed in small groups and each group is presented with a box. There are four stages:

This activity is undertaken with first year nursing students, and Liz Ditzel sees the improvement in critical thinking in their second year of study. While previously students introduced to the simulation suite used to go straight to the mannequin and touch it, now they are more likely to stop and think about possibilities first. Student feedback is also positive, with many students reporting they learned a lot from this exercise. Liz Ditzel and Josie Crawley are publishing their initiative nationally and internationally to inform the teaching of critical thinking more broadly.