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September 02-03, 2019 | Vienna, Austria

WORLD NURSING FORUM

RHEUMATOLOGY & TRAUMA CARE

13

th

International Conference on

&

Nursing Forum 2019 & Rheumatology 2019

September 02-03, 2019

Journal name: Journal of Nursing Research and Practice

J Nurs Res Pract, Volume 3

Volume 3 | ISSSN: 2632-251X

Effects of overseas undergraduate clinical experience and service-learning opportunities

Elizabeth Simon

New York Institute of Technology, USA

G

lobal service learning (GSL) is an action-oriented, pedagogical approach that engages students in the core values of the

home institution and educational opportunities offered in the selected location. Such high impact practices were embraced

by the American Colleges ever since the Peace Corps was established in the 1960s. The prominent educators, such as John

Dewey and Earnest Boyer, encouraged service learning within educational programs (Shultz, 2011). At present there is a growing

interest in establishing sustainable international collaboration in professional health education programs (Plumb et al., 2013). In

this context, one American college regularly encourages students to go on a GSL trip from 1882. However, nursing students’ GSL

was initiated from 2012 to multiple destinations: India, Dominican Republic and Haiti. Each destination is chosen with different

learning goals. Students learn about a new culture, language, health practices, opportunities, challenges and above all, how to

communicate with limited language skills. Such students’ engagement develops their professional as well as social skills (Sen,

2011). In addition to cultural and professional learning, students completed 70-80 hours of acute care clinical experience also.

These GSL trips involved an instructor from the home country as well as educators and preceptors from the destination country

also. The experience is a combination of clinical learning, service to marginalized communities and site visits and fun shopping

on a daily basis for 3 weeks. The presenter will discuss the details of planning, operation, budget and learning outcomes of the

GSL experience based on five GSL trips to India.

Biography

Elizabeth Simon, R.N., A.N.P.-B.C., Ph.D., is a professor of nursing. Prior to coming to NYIT in 2018, she was a professor of nursing

and dean of the School of Nursing at Nyack College. She also previously served as faculty and post-master’s nursing education

coordinator at Hunter-Bellevue School Nursing at Hunter. She has more than 25 years of nursing education experience and more

than 30 years of clinical experience. She is a board-certified adult health nurse practitioner who has authored, reviewed, or edited

books on critical care nursing; book chapters on transcultural issues and a book on non-communicable diseases. She has published

several articles in peer reviewed journals and periodicals and has presented at various national and international forums. Her academic

degrees include

B.Sc.

(N.) from the College of Nursing, Christian Medical College, Ludhiana, Punjab University, India; M.S. in Critical

Care Nursing from School of Nursing, Columbia University; Ed.M. in Nursing Education from Teachers College; M.S. in Adult Health

Nurse Practitioner from Hunter College; and Ph.D. in higher education from Walden University. She also taught critical care nursing

during the 2015-16 academic year.

esimon03@nyit.edu