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Dive into the research topics where Rebecca Fountain is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebecca Fountain.


Journal of Nursing Education | 2013

Flipping the Classroom to Improve Student Performance and Satisfaction

Kathy Missildine; Rebecca Fountain; Lynn Summers; Kevin P. Gosselin

This study aimed to determine the effects of a flipped classroom (i.e., reversal of time allotment for lecture and homework) and innovative learning activities on academic success and the satisfaction of nursing students. A quasi-experimental design was used to compare three approaches to learning: traditional lecture only (LO), lecture and lecture capture back-up (LLC), and the flipped classroom approach of lecture capture with innovative classroom activities (LCI). Examination scores were higher for the flipped classroom LCI group (M = 81.89, SD = 5.02) than for both the LLC group (M = 80.70, SD = 4.25), p = 0.003, and the LO group (M = 79.79, SD = 4.51), p < 0.001. Students were less satisfied with the flipped classroom method than with either of the other methods (p < 0.001). Blending new teaching technologies with interactive classroom activities can result in improved learning but not necessarily improved student satisfaction.


Nursing education perspectives | 2009

STUDENT SATISFACTION with High-Fidelity Simulation: Does It Correlate with Learning Styles?

Rebecca Fountain; Danita Alfred

&NA; The purpose of this study was to explore how learning styles correlate with student satisfacation when high‐fidelity human simulation is used in a baccalaureate nursing program. Seventy‐eight undergraduate students enrolled in an advanced medical‐surgical course completed the Student Satisfaction and Self‐Confidence in Learning scale after participating in an experiental learning lab activity that included high‐fidelity human simulation‐enhanced cardiac case scenarios. Data were then correlated with learning styles identified by a nurse entrance test. Analyses of the data revealed positive relationships between the social and solitary learning styles and student satisfaction with simulation.


Nurse Education in Practice | 2015

Preparing for disasters: Education and management strategies explored

Danita Alfred; Jenifer M. Chilton; Della Connor; Belinda J. Deal; Rebecca Fountain; Janice Hensarling; Linda Klotz

During the last half of the 20th century, the focus of nursing changed from home and field to high-tech clinics and hospitals. Nursing in the absence of technology due to man-made or natural disasters almost disappeared from the curriculum of many nursing schools. Numerous disaster events and threats in the early 21st century caused educators and practitioners to increase the emphasis on disaster nursing and those principles that guide the nurses practice in response to disasters. This article chronicles tools used by nurse educators to integrate disaster nursing into the didactic and clinical experiences of baccalaureate nursing students. We represent two nursing schools about 90 miles apart that collaborated to provide students with practical application of disaster nursing concepts. Part 1: An educational journey toward disaster nursing competencies: A curriculum in action provides an overview of the curricular tools used to insure adequate coverage of disaster nursing concepts across the curriculum. Part 2: Collaborative learning in Community Health Nursing for emergency preparedness relates the steps taken to plan, implement, and evaluate two different collaborative disaster simulation events. In this manuscript we have attempted transparency so that others can learn from our successes and our failures.


Nurse Education in Practice | 2015

Part II: collaborative learning in community health nursing for emergency preparedness

Janice Hensarling; Dell Connor; Jennifer Chilton; Rebecca Fountain; Belinda J. Deal; Linda Klotz; Danita Alfred

During the last half of the 20th century, the focus of nursing changed from home and field to high-tech clinics and hospitals. Nursing in the absence of technology due to man-made or natural disasters almost disappeared from the curriculum of many nursing schools. Numerous disaster events and threats in the early 21st century caused educators and practitioners to increase the emphasis on disaster nursing and those principles that guide the nurses practice in response to disasters. This article chronicles tools used by nurse educators to integrate disaster nursing into the didactic and clinical experiences of baccalaureate nursing students. We represent two nursing schools about 90 miles apart that collaborated to provide students with practical application of disaster nursing concepts. Part 1: An educational journey toward disaster nursing competencies: A curriculum in action provides an overview of the curricular tools used to insure adequate coverage of disaster nursing concepts across the curriculum. Part 2: Collaborative learning in Community Health Nursing for emergency preparedness relates the steps taken to plan, implement, and evaluate two different collaborative disaster simulation events. In this manuscript we have attempted transparency so that others can learn from our successes and our failures.


Nursing education perspectives | 2011

Think Globally, Learn Locally: Multimedia Conferencing Between Two Schools of Nursing

Carol S. Sternberger; Belinda J. Deal; Rebecca Fountain

Three nurse educators, who met at the American Nurses Association Nursing Care in Life, Death and Disaster Conference (Atlanta, June 2007), collaborated on a multimedia conferencing project to teach nursing students about disaster response. This case study examines two outcomes of this project. The project provided students in a disaster nursing course in Indiana an opportunity to meet faculty who helped establish and maintain a special needs shelter in Texas following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. It also demonstrated, through the use of technology, the ability of nurse faculty to share their expertise with colleagues and students residing in different geographical locations.


Nurse Education in Practice | 2015

Preparing for disasters

Danita Alfred; Jenifer M. Chilton; Della Connor; Belinda J. Deal; Rebecca Fountain; Janice Hensarling; Linda Klotz

During the last half of the 20th century, the focus of nursing changed from home and field to high-tech clinics and hospitals. Nursing in the absence of technology due to man-made or natural disasters almost disappeared from the curriculum of many nursing schools. Numerous disaster events and threats in the early 21st century caused educators and practitioners to increase the emphasis on disaster nursing and those principles that guide the nurses practice in response to disasters. This article chronicles tools used by nurse educators to integrate disaster nursing into the didactic and clinical experiences of baccalaureate nursing students. We represent two nursing schools about 90 miles apart that collaborated to provide students with practical application of disaster nursing concepts. Part 1: An educational journey toward disaster nursing competencies: A curriculum in action provides an overview of the curricular tools used to insure adequate coverage of disaster nursing concepts across the curriculum. Part 2: Collaborative learning in Community Health Nursing for emergency preparedness relates the steps taken to plan, implement, and evaluate two different collaborative disaster simulation events. In this manuscript we have attempted transparency so that others can learn from our successes and our failures.


Nurse Education in Practice | 2014

Part I: an educational journey toward disaster nursing competencies: a curriculum in action

Danita Alfred; Jennifer Chilton; Della Connor; Belinda J. Deal; Rebecca Fountain; Janice Hensarling; Linda Klotz

During the last half of the 20th century, the focus of nursing changed from home and field to high-tech clinics and hospitals. Nursing in the absence of technology due to man-made or natural disasters almost disappeared from the curriculum of many nursing schools. Numerous disaster events and threats in the early 21st century caused educators and practitioners to increase the emphasis on disaster nursing and those principles that guide the nurses practice in response to disasters. This article chronicles tools used by nurse educators to integrate disaster nursing into the didactic and clinical experiences of baccalaureate nursing students. We represent two nursing schools about 90 miles apart that collaborated to provide students with practical application of disaster nursing concepts. Part 1: An educational journey toward disaster nursing competencies: A curriculum in action provides an overview of the curricular tools used to insure adequate coverage of disaster nursing concepts across the curriculum. Part 2: Collaborative learning in Community Health Nursing for emergency preparedness relates the steps taken to plan, implement, and evaluate two different collaborative disaster simulation events. In this manuscript we have attempted transparency so that others can learn from our successes and our failures.


Journal of Professional Nursing | 2018

A Process for Teaching Research Methods in a Virtual Environment

Jenifer M. Chilton; Zhaomin He; Rebecca Fountain; Danita Alfred

&NA; Translating and integrating scholarship into practice is a difficult concept for students to embrace through a passive education model. Therefore, innovative teaching strategies were integrated into a translational science course for online graduate nursing students. The purpose of this project was to increase understanding of the research process and stimulate interest in translating nursing evidence into practice. The result was an effective educational strategy for teaching and learning about the research process in a virtual environment.


Nurse Educator | 2010

Educational Opportunities: A Nursing School Model for Medical Special-Needs Sheltering

Belinda J. Deal; Danita Alfred; Rebecca Fountain; Terri Ford; Jennifer Chilton

The devastation of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina increased the awareness of persons who were unable to self-evacuate because of physical and/or mental disabilities. From that awareness, plans emerged to provide a safe haven for those who had special needs. In this article, we describe our efforts as a school of nursing to shelter medical special needs (MSN) evacuees in the wake of a hurricane. After the shelter closed, faculty and students involved in the shelter answered a short survey that included both open- and close-ended questions. The responses are summarized to encourage other schools of nursing to consider caring for MSN evacuees and to share our successes, our failures, and our plans for the future.


Disaster Management & Response | 2006

Challenges and opportunities of nursing care in special-needs shelters.

Belinda J. Deal; Rebecca Fountain; Carol Ann Russell-Broaddus; Melinda Stanley-Hermanns

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Danita Alfred

University of Texas at Tyler

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Jenifer M. Chilton

University of Texas at Tyler

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Linda Klotz

University of Texas at Tyler

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Amy Mackenzie

University of Texas at Tyler

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Kathy Missildine

University of Texas at Tyler

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Lynn Summers

University of Texas at Austin

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Beth Mastel-Smith

University of Texas at Tyler

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Jonathan MacClements

University of Texas at Austin

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