Welcome to nursing! Successful Studying for Nursing Students is part of the New Notes on Nursing series, a series created especially for you, the nursing student at the start of your nursing journey. This book is an in-depth look at all the study skills you will need in your first year of being a student and beyond. From getting started at university to critical thinking, Successful Studying for Nursing Students is your essential guide.
The New Notes on Nursing series presents key topics in a highly accessible way, without making assumptions about your existing knowledge. Concise volumes cover critical and emerging areas, including cultural competence, digital professionalism, politics and activism, clinical placements and more. The aim is to make content engaging and easy to absorb, focussing just on what is essential for success on your course. Using a relaxed writing style and an all-new design, these unique books provide personal guidance from experts and students alike. So when you are in a hurry and need a study companion you can trust, reach for New Notes on Nursing!
Key Features
- Case studies and storytelling approaches help link theory to practice
- Graphics, icons and mind maps enhance the text and aid visual learners
- Written to show how specific knowledge relates to wider concepts
- Learning is presented in small, self-contained sections for quick location and digestion
- Terms and concepts are explained using simple language
- Content is clearly mapped to latest NMC standards
- Accompanying videos provide additional insights and bring study to life
Author Information
Edited by Melanie Hayward, RN (Child) SCPHN (SN) CPNP RNT FHEA FRSA, Associate Professor – Education: Quality Assurance and Enhancement, Buckinghamshire New University
1. How to Thrive and Survive
2. Notes on Learning How to Learn
3. Notes on Essential Study Skills for Nurses
4. Notes on How to Write Well
5. Notes on Critical Thinking and Reflection—How Nurses Keep Developing
6. Notes on Understanding Assessment
7. Notes on Digital Literacy—Part of Your Professional Practice
8. Notes on Understanding Research—How to Keep Your Practice Up to Date
9. Notes on Presenting with Confidence
10. Notes on Applying Academic Knowledge, Skills and Behaviours in Your Nursing Practice
11. Notes on Neurodiversity
Melanie Hayward’s (editor) ‘Successful studying for nursing students’ book forms part of a series of nursing student support books and online tools, designed to be user friendly, and guide student’s from the beginning of their nursing programme with the focus on key issues that student’s will be faced with during their studies. ‘Successful studying for nursing students’ is the second book in a series of ‘New Notes on Nursing’ and contributions within it come not only from nurse academic authors, but also former student nurses’. It focuses specifically on ‘study skills’, with an emphasis on students getting started with their study skills and critical thinking in their first year of University. It appears to be aimed at any nursing student who will register with the NMC, not only BSc nursing students.
What I particularly liked about this book is the immediate accessible characteristics of the book itself. It seems to have been written to match the wider participation characteristics of the nursing programmes and students themselves. Pages are colour coded, with the colour key available within the contents page to enable readers to access the sections they need easily. Other useful colour keys include: Case studies which are contained in pink clearly marked sections, which add a realistic clinical feature to the information contained in the book. Helpful tips are also provided and contained within yellow sections, and reflections are contained in green sections. The use of colour within the book, I feel, provides the reader with a sense of enjoyment in engaging with the different sections, whilst also aiding accessibility. Some student text books can feel onerous to use, but this book is as it states ‘different’, and this is clearly it’s advantage.
The content of the book is far more than just study skill support. It contains so many different elements that a nursing student needs to know, that it could become the new go-to nursing text. Nursing programmes are never linear courses, they contain several different genres and new skills to be learnt before a student can competently become a registrant with the NMC. This book contains elements which will benefit students throughout every stage of their nursing programme. It includes information about interprofessional working, digital literacy, and evidence-based practice to name just a few of the topics covered, and will even support them when they come to write their third year dissertation. Whilst this book was written by many different author’s it is abundantly clear how well the information was brought together during editing to give the overall content a seamless, and fluent structure throughout.
Overall this book delivers a comprehensive outline of the important study skills required by student nurses, alongside other important elements needed to become a well rounded registered nurse or nursing associate. I would wholeheartedly recommend this book to all nursing programmes as core text, and look forward to introducing it to my own modules.
Tracey Hayes – Senior Lecturer in Nursing