Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth Bethune is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Elizabeth Bethune.


Collegian | 2001

Assessing Australian undergraduate clinical Learning

Allison F Williams Grad; Sally Wellard; Elizabeth Bethune

Determining the clinical preparedness of undergraduate nursing students is vital in developing graduates who are ready to assume the roles of registered nurses. This paper reports findings relating to clinical assessment in Australian undergraduate nursing programs. Using data collected in a national survey and selected case studies, current assessment practices are described. Although students were increasingly exposed to a narrower range of clinical experiences, claims to comprehensive preparation of nurses remain prominent. Issues in the congruity between assessment methods and purported outcomes of clinical learning programs are discussed.


International Journal of Health Planning and Management | 2010

Shaping an Australian nursing and midwifery specialty framework for workforce regulation: criteria development

Susan Jane King; Kaye Robyn Ogle; Elizabeth Bethune

One of the biggest obstacles identified in achieving Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) was the lack of available qualified health personal to meet the health needs of the global population. With nurses being the main workforce component in health systems, the human resource challenge for most countries is to address the reported shortage of nurses. Skill mix is one suggestion. In Australia, workforce projections indicated a shortage of 40,000 nurses by 2010. Toward the reform of the Australian health workforce, one project aimed to develop a nationally consistent framework for nursing and midwifery specialization based on knowledge and skills to generate the first national database iteration for designated specialties. A literature review looked at the way nursing specialty practices were defined in the United Kingdom, the United States of America and Canada. Three international and three national sources of criteria for specialty nursing practice were mapped against each other. The result was six criteria synthesized to define nursing practice groups as Australian nursing specialties. Each criterion was operationalized with criteria indicators to meet Australian expectations. The nurses in Australia commented on the criteria before they were finalized. An audit of national workforce databases identified nursing practice groups. The criteria were applied to identify nursing specialties and practice strands that would form a national nursing framework. This paper reports on the criteria developed to assess specialty practice at a national level in Australia.


Collegian | 2007

Mapping Postgraduate Nurse Education in Australia 2001-2002

Robyn Ogle; Elizabeth Bethune; Pauline Nugent; Arlene Walker; David Wellman

Workforce planning at a national level within nursing and midwifery has been largely fragmented and uncoordinated with health-care organisations, state health authorities, peak nursing organisations and the tertiary sector often engaging in independent decision making and planning. In order to gain an increased understanding of the complexity of contemporary nurse education and to quantify the number of graduates of nursing education courses into categories that are meaningful for workforce planning, the federal Department of Education, Science and Training commissioned a national study in 2002. The aim of this study was to map and quantify current and projected numbers of Australian domestic nursing postgraduate students within their respective specialisation according to each State/Territory. All Australian universities offering postgraduate courses in nursing were electronically surveyed (n = 30). Two non-university providers of postgraduate nursing education were also asked to participate, but only one responded. Data were gathered on the number of domestic postgraduate nursing students enrolled in 2002, the number of course completions in 2001 and projected completions for 2002. Of the 13 broad band specialty categories developed for the study, the specialties of Midwifery and High Dependency were dominant in both student enrolments and course completions, including projected completions. The range of specialties that were offered varied by State/Territory, as did the number and percentage of students enrolled, completing and projected to complete each specialty program. Generic courses (without listed specialisations) continue to complicate the process of attempting to tease out and quantify accurately the number of enrolled and completing postgraduate students according to area of specialty practice.


Journal of Advanced Nursing | 1996

Reflective journal writing in nurse education: whose interests does it serve?

Sally Wellard; Elizabeth Bethune


International Journal of Nursing Practice | 1999

Registered nurses’ perceptions of teaching: Constraints to the teaching moment

de Sales Turner; Sally Wellard; Elizabeth Bethune


Nurse Education Today | 2000

Staffing of undergraduate clinical learning programs in Australia

Sally Wellard; Allison Williams; Elizabeth Bethune


Nurse Education Today | 2007

Assessment of learning in contemporary nurse education: Do we need standardised examination for nurse registration?

Sally Wellard; Elizabeth Bethune; Kristin Heggen


Journal of Advanced Nursing | 1997

Critical thinking skills: the role of prior experience

Elizabeth Bethune; Noel Jackling


Journal of Advanced Nursing | 2003

Families' needs in emergency departments: instrument development

Bernice Redley; Sandra A. LeVasseur; Gwenda Peters; Elizabeth Bethune


Australian Journal of Rural Health | 2000

Learning Issues for Nurses in Renal Satellite Centres

Sally Wellard; Elizabeth Bethune

Collaboration


Dive into the Elizabeth Bethune's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sally Wellard

Federation University Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge