Course Project: Introduction to Course Project
Course Project: Introduction to Course Project
Evidence-based practice involves a great deal more than simply reading nursing periodicals on a regular basis. Nurses can take a more proactive approach to evidence-based practice by identifying authentic problems and concerns, and then using that to guide their inquiries into current research. In this way, nurses can connect the results of relevant research studies to their nursing practice.
For the Course Project, you identify and apply relevant research to a specific nursing topic or problem. You begin by formulating an answerable question that is relevant to nursing and evidence-based practice. In later weeks of this course, you continue the Course Project by conducting a literature review and then determining how the evidence from the literature can be applied to nursing practice.
Before you begin, review the Course Project Overview document located in this week’s Learning Resources.
Save your time - order a paper!
Get your paper written from scratch within the tight deadline. Our service is a reliable solution to all your troubles. Place an order on any task and we will take care of it. You won’t have to worry about the quality and deadlines
Order Paper NowNote: This Course Project will serve as the Portfolio Assignment for the course. In addition to submitting portions of this Project in Weeks 2 and 5, you will turn in all three deliverables in Week 10.
Course Project: Part 1—Identifying a Researchable Problem
One of the most challenging aspects of EBP is to actually identify the answerable question.
—Karen Sue Davies
Formulating a question that targets the goal of your research is a challenging but essential task. The question plays a crucial role in all other aspects of the research, including the determination of the research design and theoretical perspective to be applied, which data will be collected, and which tools will be used for analysis. It is therefore essential to take the time to ensure that the research question addresses what you actually want to study. Doing so will increase your likelihood of obtaining meaningful results.
In this first component of the Course Project, you formulate questions to address a particular nursing issue or problem. You use the PICOT model—patient/population, intervention/issue, comparison, and outcome—outlined in the Learning Resources to design your questions.
To prepare:
-
- Review the article, “Formulating the Evidence Based Practice Question: A Review of the Frameworks,” found in the Learning Resources for this week. Focus on the PICOT model for guiding the development of research questions.
- Review the section beginning on page 71 of the course text, titled, “Developing and Refining Research Problems” in the course text, which focuses on analyzing the feasibility of a research problem.
- Reflect on an issue or problem that you have noticed in your nursing practice. Consider the significance of this issue or problem.
- Generate at least five questions that relate to the issue which you have identified. Use the criteria in your course text to select one question that would be most appropriate in terms of significance, feasibility, and interest. Be prepared to explain your rationale.
- Formulate a preliminary PICO question—one that is answerable—based on your analysis. What are the PICO variables (patient/population, intervention/issue, comparison, and outcome) for this question?
Note: Not all of these variables may be appropriate to every question. Be sure to analyze which are and are not relevant to your specific question.
- Using the PICOT variables that you determined for your question, develop a list of at least 10 keywords that could be used when conducting a literature search to investigate current research pertaining to the question.
To complete:
Write a 3- to 4-page paper that includes the following:
- A summary of your area of interest, an identification of the problem that you have selected, and an explanation of the significance of this problem for nursing practice
- The 5 questions you have generated and a description of how you analyzed them for feasibility
- Your preliminary PICOT question and a description of each PICOT variable relevant to your question
- At least 10 possible keywords that could be used when conducting a literature search for your PICOT question and a rationale for your selection
QUALITY OF WORK SUBMITTED:
THE EXTENT OF WHICH WORK MEETS THE ASSIGNED CRITERIA AND WORK REFLECTS GRADUATE LEVEL CRITICAL AND ANALYTIC THINKING.—
QUALITY OF WORK SUBMITTED:
THE PURPOSE OF THE PAPER IS CLEAR.—
ASSIMILATION AND SYNTHESIS OF IDEAS:
THE EXTEND TO WHICH THE WORK REFLECTS THE STUDENT’S ABILITY TO:
UNDERSTAND AND INTERPRET THE ASSIGNMENT’S KEY CONCEPTS.—
ASSIMILATION AND SYNTHESIS OF IDEAS:
THE EXTEND TO WHICH THE WORK REFLECTS THE STUDENT’S ABILITY TO:
APPLY AND INTEGRATE MATERIAL IN COURSE RESOURCES (I.E. VIDEO, REQUIRED READINGS, AND TEXTBOOK) AND CREDIBLE OUTSIDE RESOURCES.—
ASSIMILATION AND SYNTHESIS OF IDEAS:
THE EXTEND TO WHICH THE WORK REFLECTS THE STUDENT’S ABILITY TO:
SYNTHESIZE (COMBINES VARIOUS COMPONENTS OR DIFFERENT IDEAS INTO A NEW WHOLE) MATERIAL IN COURSE RESOURCES (I.E. VIDEO, REQUIRED READINGS, TEXTBOOK) AND OUTSIDE, CREDIBLE RESOURCES BY COMPARING DIFFERENT POINTS OF VIEW AND HIGHLIGHTING SIMILARITIES, DIFFERENCES, AND CONNECTIONS.—
WRITTEN EXPRESSION AND FORMATTING
PARAGRAPH AND SENTENCE STRUCTURE: PARAGRAPHS MAKE CLEAR POINTS THAT SUPPORT WELL DEVELOPED IDEAS, FLOW LOGICALLY, AND DEMONSTRATE CONTINUITY OF IDEAS. SENTENCES ARE CLEARLY STRUCTURED AND CAREFULLY FOCUSED–NEITHER LONG AND RAMBLING NOR SHORT AND LACKING SUBSTANCE.—
WRITTEN EXPRESSION AND FORMATTING
ENGLISH WRITING STANDARDS: CORRECT GRAMMAR, MECHANICS, AND PROPER PUNCTUATION—
WRITTEN EXPRESSION AND FORMATTING
THE PAPER FOLLOWS CORRECT APA FORMAT FOR TITLE PAGE, HEADINGS, FONT, SPACING, MARGINS, INDENTATIONS, PAGE NUMBERS, RUNNING HEAD, PARENTHETICAL/IN-TEXT CITATIONS, AND REFERENCE LIST.—
Total Points: 100 |
---|