Student Name
Western Governors University
C919 Facilitation of Context-Based Student Centered Learning
Prof. Name:
Date
The Community Health Nursing course is an intensive eight-week undergraduate course designed to prepare Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) students with foundational and applied competencies required for community-based nursing practice. The course emphasizes the use of the nursing process to conduct comprehensive community health assessments and to design, implement, and evaluate interventions that address the needs of diverse populations across the lifespan. Through structured didactic content and experiential learning, students are guided in developing professional judgment and population-focused care strategies that align with national nursing standards and BSN essentials.
The course is delivered in a student-centered format, enrolling no more than 40 learners to ensure meaningful interaction and engagement. Classes meet weekly on campus for seven hours, allowing for in-depth discussions, simulations, and collaborative activities. Throughout the course, students are introduced to eight core concepts that directly support professional nursing competencies relevant to community and public health practice.
The BSN-prepared nurse plays a critical role in advancing community health by promoting wellness, preventing disease, and addressing health disparities among vulnerable populations. This course prepares students to function as advocates, educators, and collaborators within community settings. Emphasis is placed on health promotion, disease prevention, and population-based care, ensuring that students can translate theoretical knowledge into practical application within real-world communities.
The curriculum addresses a comprehensive range of community health nursing topics, including but not limited to:
Foundations and historical evolution of community health nursing
Epidemiological principles and population health indicators
Social, political, economic, and environmental determinants of health
Community assessment methodologies, including windshield surveys
Health promotion strategies across the lifespan
Vulnerable and underserved populations
Substance abuse, violence, and communicable diseases
Disaster preparedness and emergency management
These topics are intentionally sequenced to build upon one another, enabling students to progressively deepen their understanding of community health nursing practice.
The course is structured into eight sequential weekly modules, each aligned with specific learning objectives and course outcomes. Modules are scaffolded to reinforce prior knowledge while introducing increasingly complex concepts. Weekly key concepts are clearly articulated to guide student learning and ensure alignment with overarching course goals. Evidence-based, active learning strategies are integrated into each module to support critical thinking and clinical reasoning.
By the conclusion of the course, students are expected to synthesize knowledge across modules, demonstrating a comprehensive understanding of community health nursing roles and responsibilities.
Week 1: Foundations of Community Health Nursing
Students explore the historical development and evolving roles of the community health nurse. Through collaborative discussions, learners examine professional responsibilities and health promotion functions within community settings.
Week 2: Epidemiology and Disease Prevention
This module introduces core epidemiological concepts, including disease surveillance, immunizations, and screenings. Students participate in community service-learning activities to assess factors contributing to emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases.
Week 3: Healthcare Systems and Policy
Students analyze case studies addressing national and global healthcare trends, including the impact of policy, politics, and economics on health systems. The role of government and third-party payers in healthcare financing is examined.
Week 4: Community Assessment and Planning
Learners apply evidence-based practice to assess community needs through concept mapping, windshield surveys, and resource analysis. Students develop, implement, and evaluate community health plans.
Week 5: Health Promotion Across the Lifespan
This module focuses on health concerns affecting individuals from infancy through older adulthood. Faculty-led simulations emphasize patient-centered and family-focused care.
Week 6: Vulnerable Populations
Using a flipped classroom model, students explore healthcare challenges, risk factors, and quality-of-life concerns affecting individuals with disabilities, chronic illness, mental health conditions, homelessness, and migrant status.
Week 7: Population Health Risks
Students examine populations at increased risk for HIV, sexually transmitted diseases, hepatitis, and tuberculosis. Guest speakers provide firsthand perspectives on substance abuse, violence, communicable diseases, and disaster-related community impacts.
Week 8: Disaster Management and Preparedness
The final module addresses the nurse’s role in disaster prevention, preparedness, response, and recovery. Students participate in a mock disaster drill to assess and evaluate disaster effects on communities.
The Community Health course integrates active learning strategies to enhance engagement, autonomy, and self-reflection. Teaching methods are intentionally designed to foster a supportive learning environment in which students feel confident expressing ideas and asking questions. Each weekly concept incorporates an experiential learning activity to reinforce knowledge acquisition.
| Week | Learning Strategy | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Collaborative Discussion | Exploration of community health nursing roles |
| 2 | Service Learning | Community-based epidemiology activity |
| 3 | Case Study | Analysis and problem-solving of healthcare issues |
| 4 | Concept Mapping | Community needs assessment and windshield survey |
| 5 | Simulation | Faculty-led patient-centered care role-play |
| 6 | Flipped Classroom | In-depth discussion of vulnerable populations |
| 7 | Guest Speaker Q&A | Real-world connections to course content |
| 8 | Disaster Simulation | Interprofessional collaboration and evaluation |
Weekly course concepts align with the Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) competencies, which include patient-centered care, evidence-based practice, teamwork and collaboration, safety, quality improvement, and informatics (Hunt, 2012).
| Weekly Key Concept | QSEN Competency | Alignment Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| History and roles of community health nursing | Patient-Centered Care | Encourages patient involvement in care planning |
| Epidemiology and immunizations | Informatics & Evidence-Based Practice | Utilizes technology and research to promote safety |
| Policy and healthcare systems | Quality Improvement | Data-driven advocacy for improved outcomes |
| Community assessment | Quality Improvement | Data collection and evaluation strategies |
| Lifespan health concerns | Patient-Centered Care | Family and individual engagement |
| Vulnerable populations | Quality Improvement | Identification of barriers and resource advocacy |
| Substance abuse and disasters | Safety | Prevention of harm and risk mitigation |
| Disaster management | Teamwork and Collaboration | Interprofessional decision-making |
| Weekly Concept | Course Alignment |
|---|---|
| Evolving role of the nurse | BSN role and responsibilities |
| Epidemiological principles | Population health promotion |
| Health policy impact | Population health promotion |
| Community planning | Population health promotion |
| Lifespan health | Population health promotion |
| Vulnerable populations | Population health promotion |
| Community health threats | Population health promotion |
| Disaster collaboration | BSN role and responsibilities |
Developing a comprehensive course outline is a fundamental responsibility of the nurse educator. The outline serves as a formal agreement between faculty and students, clearly defining expectations, content, and learning outcomes. According to Bastable (2017), a well-constructed outline ensures consistency, clarity, and coherence within the teaching plan, thereby supporting effective learning experiences.
The course employs collaborative learning, simulation, and role-play to address diverse learner needs. These strategies accommodate variations in age, cultural background, prior experience, and learning preferences. Simulation is emphasized as the primary instructional strategy due to its effectiveness in integrating visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learning styles.
Simulation activities are incorporated during weeks five and eight. Role-play simulations focus on patient-centered care across the lifespan, while disaster simulations provide hands-on experience in emergency response. The use of simulation manikins allows students to practice high-risk scenarios in a safe environment, enhancing confidence and competence.
Simulation-based learning supports kinesthetic learners through hands-on practice, visual learners through staged scenarios, and auditory learners through guided discussions and role-play. This multimodal approach ensures inclusivity and maximizes knowledge retention.
Simulation activities are followed by structured debriefing sessions to promote reflection and clinical reasoning. Dreifuerst’s (2015) Debriefing for Meaningful Learning (DML) framework supports reflection-in-action, reflection-on-action, and reflection-beyond-action, enabling students to anticipate patient needs and apply learning to future clinical situations.
Face-to-face learning environments foster collaboration, teamwork, and interprofessional engagement. Guest speakers from disciplines such as epidemiology and social work enhance learning relevance. In clinical settings, collaboration with healthcare teams reinforces course objectives. For online delivery, partnerships with information technology departments can support innovative instructional design.
Students’ cultural backgrounds, socioeconomic status, prior knowledge, and life experiences significantly influence learning. Language barriers, financial constraints, limited access to technology, and competing family responsibilities may hinder academic progress. Nurse educators must remain adaptable and inclusive, employing varied teaching strategies to support equitable learning opportunities (Bastable, 2017).
The constructivist theory underpins the design of the Community Health course. This theory posits that learners actively construct knowledge by integrating new information with existing experiences. Weekly modules build sequentially, allowing students to connect concepts and deepen understanding through active engagement and reflection.
Bastable, S. (2017). Nurse as educator: Principles of teaching and learning for nursing practice (5th ed.). Jones & Bartlett Learning.
Dreifuerst, K. T. (2015). Getting started with debriefing for meaningful learning. Clinical Simulation in Nursing, 11(5), 268–275.
Flavin, B. (2018, April 24). What are QSEN competencies and why are they important for nurses? Rasmussen University.
Hunt, D. (2012). QSEN competencies: A bridge to practice. Nursing Made Incredibly Easy!, 10(5), 1–3.
Post Categories
Tags