NSG 5002 Week 1 Knowledge
Check with Answers
Question 1 (1 point)
Historically, nursing preparation was referred to as “training,” and many nurses educated
through the 1970s still use this term to refer to their educ
...
NSG 5002 Week 1 Knowledge
Check with Answers
Question 1 (1 point)
Historically, nursing preparation was referred to as “training,” and many nurses educated
through the 1970s still use this term to refer to their education. Why is this terminology
particularly problematic in light of the advances made in nursing science in the last 30 years?
Question 1 options:
A) On-the-job apprenticeships are no longer as prevalent as they were
up through the late 1970s and early 1980s.
B) It places emphasis on nurses’ abilities to perform tasks rather than
reason through and understand the purpose of their actions.
C) Most modern nurses pursue Master’s level education beyond their
practice-based Bachelor’s education.
D) The last 30 years have seen nursing education move away from
physician-taught courses in hospitals to professor-taught courses at
universities.
Question 2 (1 point)
During the 1960s, why did nursing scholars heavily emphasize a focus on the theoretical
development of nursing as its own, independent discipline?
Question 2 options:
A) To support doctoral education for nurses that was discipline
specific
B) To prove that the logical positivist approach was a poor fit for the
discipline
C) To encourage and enhance the continued development of nursing
science
D) To promote research by nurses in all fields, not merely nursing
science
Question 3 (1 point)
Which argument best supports the idea of nursing as a professional discipline rather than an
academic discipline?
Question 3 options:
A) “Nursing is an applied science. Its practice component places an
emphasis on the delivery of service by nurses rather than the
development of academic knowledge.”
B) “Nursing is a discipline with unique substance. It borrows very
little from other disciplines and, as a result, is beyond the realm of
most academic programs in the sciences that acknowledge idea
sharing across disciplines.”
C) “Nursing is a concept with a lengthy unofficial history. Individuals
have been providing nursing care to others since the Crusades, and
this professional provision of services predates formal education in
the field.”
D) “Nursing is a relative newcomer to advanced education. For many
years, nurses were educated or trained only at a Bachelor’s level,
and advanced practice therefore has its roots in the profession itself
rather than in academia.”
Question 4 (1 point)
Which statement best describes the role that logical positivism plays in modern philosophical
thought about nursing science and science in general?
Question 4 options:
A) It remains at the forefront of the understanding of science and
dictates the ways in which scientific research is performed.
B) It works in concert with humanistic philosophies of science, with
the opposing ideologies functioning as a system of philosophical
checks and balances.
C) It no longer holds sway over the sciences, but its influence is so
deeply ingrained in the field that it continues to impact modern
ideas about science.
D) It has been completely discredited by postmodern philosophers and
is regarded as a flawed relic of past scientific thinking.
Question 5 (1 point)
During the 1960s and 1970s, the theory movement in nursing sought to “prove” that nursing was
a science by applying strict logical positivist philosophy to the discipline. Why was this
application problematic from a philosophical standpoint?
Question 5 options:
A) It placed too great an emphasis on the art of nursing and left itself
open to criticism by the postmodern school of philosophy.
B) It ignored the humanistic and social aspects of providing quality
care and focused on the hard science involved.
C) It took too long to develop and by the time it came to fruition the
logical positivist perspective had fallen out of favor with most
scientific disciplines.
D) It was later disproved by feminist philosophers who unequivocally
demonstrated that the logical positivist view was heavily biased
against women and minorities.
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