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Dive into the research topics where Maria T Mackay is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria T Mackay.


Nurse Education in Practice | 2014

The development of a model of education for casual academic staff who support nursing students in practice.

Maria T Mackay; Roy A Brown; Joanne T Joyce-McCoach; Kylie M. Smith

Nursing is predominantly a practice based profession where clinical placement for pre-registration nursing students is a significant component of their programme, as this is pivotal in achieving work readiness of the graduate registered nurse. It is therefore important to ensure nursing students have high quality clinical placements that are supervised by well-prepared experienced registered nurses. This paper discusses one component of the reconnaissance phase of a wider action research project being undertaken in a metropolitan university in NSW, Australia seeking to enhance the development and support of casual academic staff known as clinical supervisors who support students in clinical placement. The outcomes attributed to this project are the development of a participation model which has resulted in a collaborative partnership between the university and clinical supervisors and secondly, the embedding of solution focused ways of working and practice development into the program. The information from the reconnaissance phase of this project confirms the need for further research into the implementation of the participatory model to ensure that future education and support process are developed through collaboration.


Nurse Education Today | 2016

Review of transnational nursing education programme curricula: process, findings, and recommendations

Maria T Mackay; Joanne T Joyce-McCoach; Moira Stephens; Natalie Cutler; Roy A Brown; Ritin Fernandez; Terence John Froggatt; Leeanne Heaton; Lorna Moxham; Jenny Sim; Victoria Traynor; Sharon Bourgeois

BACKGROUND The University of Wollongong (UOW) delivers two Transnational International Programmes (TNEP) in Hong Kong (HK): a 1-year undergraduate Bachelor of Nursing (Conversion) degree and a 2-year postgraduate Master of Nursing degree. A curriculum review of these programmes has been undertaken to ensure the quality of the programme remains consistently high and competitive in an international environment. AIM The aim of the Curriculum Review Project was to utilise the experience of expert academic staff to review the TNEP curricula delivered by an Australian University in Hong Kong (HK) to ensure it met contemporary needs of students, the university, and the Hong Kong Authority. METHODS The curriculum review projects followed a qualitative research methodology. Thematic analysis was undertaken utilising Braun and Clarkes six-phase method (2006), as this method facilitated an inductive semantic approach where themes are strongly linked to the data and sourced from the explicit meaning of the discourse within the interview (Braun and Clarke, 2006). RESULTS In total, there were 6 participants who were all permanent academic staff members within the School of Nursing at the UOW. The results of this project have been reported within a strengths, weaknesses, opportunity, and threats (SWOT) framework. Participants recognised the value and challenges to both individual students and the broader nursing profession in HK. Overall, there was a perception that being involved as an academic staff member in a TNEP developed both their subject knowledge and teaching skills. CONCLUSIONS This project has demonstrated that the TNEP makes an important contribution to the nursing profession in HK, while also facilitating the growth and development of academic staff at UOW.


Nurse Education in Practice | 2018

Empowering aged care nurses to deliver person-centred care: Enabling nurses to shine

Kelly Marriott-Statham; Maria T Mackay; Ngaire Brennan; Jacinta Mackay

In this paper, the authors will describe the journey of registered nurses across a series of workshops as part of a research project that was undertaken in a regional aged care service in New South Wales, Australia. The aim of the project was to empower the participant registered nurses to positively influence the health care workplace culture within the residential care home by raising consciousness about their own practice. Registered nurses were actively involved in this reconnaissance phase of a participatory action research project through practice development principles and methods. Registered nurses determined the content and the outcomes of the overall program. The researchers evaluated the impact of a series of workshops, designed to develop skills and knowledge using nominal group technique. Results revealed registered nurses perceived they were empowered to flourish, and developed an understanding of the uniqueness of their role. A shared understanding of the role of the registered nurse in the aged care setting was fundamental in enabling them to feel empowered to lead their team and contribute positively to the workplace culture. Overall, the outcomes of this project have positively impacted workplace culture.


Nurse Education in Practice | 2018

Empowering clinical supervisors to flourish though critical companionship

Maria T Mackay; Moira Stephens; Siobhan Wragg; Saskia J Ebejer; Sharon Bourgeois

Education for professional nursing practice has undergone a significant shift over the last few decades impacting nursing practice and the relationship between nurses. Enhancing professional practice and acting as a conduit for empowering nurses to be active participants in their learning and development is Practice Development. This action research project with philosophical premises of critical companionship and human flourishing aimed to develop the knowledge and skills of registered nurses in their ability to provide clinical supervision of nursing students in practice. The overall project consisted of two action research cycles in two different health facilities. Participants in both projects identified similar issues and common learning needs including; how to better understand and develop skills in reflective practice; how to provide a positive learning and enabling environment; and how to provide effective solution focused feedback. Workshop facilitators witnessed the flourishing of participants as they were enabled to negotiate their learning requirements; grow and develop in their roles over the workshop series. Participants themselves identified personal growth in skills, knowledge and confidence in being a preceptor as a result of the workshops in the study. Overall, this study has resulted in the development and capacity building of the nursing workforce clinical placement capacity through the development of clinical supervisors.


Journal of Nursing Education | 2017

Introduction of Undergraduate Nursing Students to an Objective Structured Clinical Examination

Renee M Brighton; Maria T Mackay; Roy A Brown; Carley Jans; Carolyn Antoniou


The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Journal | 2015

Advancing nursing and midwifery practice through strategic collaboration: the establishment of a rural clinical school

Karen Francis; Margaret McLeod; Judith Anderson; Mary FitzGerald; Andrew Crowther; Angela M Brown; Sharon Bourgeois; Maria T Mackay; Antje D Badger


Nurse Education Today | 2018

Adaptation and validation of the clinical supervision self-assessment tool among registered nurses

Jesina Chigavazira; Ritin Fernandez; Maria T Mackay; Samuel Lapkin


Archive | 2017

Incorporating the nursing and midwifery Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health curriculum framework into a BN program

Rebekkah Middleton; Moira Stephens; Maria T Mackay


Collegian | 2017

The experiences of Australian undergraduate nursing students of a clinical placement in Cambodia

Elizabeth J Halcomb; Carolyn Antoniou; Rebekkah Middleton; Maria T Mackay


International Practice Development Journal | 2016

Making sense of critical participatory action research. Reflections on The Action Research Planner: Doing Critical Participatory Action Research

Maria T Mackay

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Moira Stephens

University of Wollongong

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Roy A Brown

University of Wollongong

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Kylie M. Smith

University of Wollongong

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Leeanne Heaton

Central Queensland University

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