Original Research

Nursing students’ experiences of clinical competency evaluation in a pre-registration nurse education programme: A qualitative study

Joseph Sitwira, Daniel O. Ashipala, Vaja Katjimune
Curationis | Vol 48, No 1 | a2699 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/curationis.v48i1.2699 | © 2025 Joseph Sitwira, Daniel O. Ashipala, Vaja Katjimune | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 05 September 2024 | Published: 15 April 2025

About the author(s)

Joseph Sitwira, Department of General Nursing Sciences, School of Nursing and Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, University of Namibia, Rundu, Namibia
Daniel O. Ashipala, Department of General Nursing Sciences, School of Nursing and Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, University of Namibia, Rundu, Namibia
Vaja Katjimune, Department of General Nursing Sciences, School of Nursing and Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, University of Namibia, Rundu, Namibia

Abstract

Background: The evaluation of clinical competence is a diverse, rigorous procedure that determines a student’s clinical competence. Despite this, little research exists on nursing students’ experiences with clinical competency evaluations in Namibia. Nurse educators should thus explore nursing students’ experiences of clinical competency evaluations in order to establish what challenges they face, as this can be beneficial for nurturing a positive learning environment.

Objectives: This research assesses nursing students’ experiences of clinical competency evaluations in a pre-registration nurse education programme at the Faculty of Health Sciences in Namibia, University of Namibia, Rundu campus.

Method: The study was conducted at a public nurse education institution in Namibia. A qualitative approach was employed utilising an exploratory, contextual and descriptive design. This study was conducted from August 2023 to October 2023 among (second-, third- and fourth-year) nursing students who were enrolled for a Bachelor of Nursing Science (Clinical) (Honours) degree. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 16 nursing students being selected using a convenience sampling method. All interviews were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. A thematic analysis method was utilised to analyse the data.

Results: Three themes emerged in this study: (1) positive experiences of evaluation for clinical competence; (2) negative experiences of evaluation for clinical competence and; (3) recommendations to improve the clinical evaluation of competence.

Conclusion: The results showed that nursing students had both negative and positive experiences during the clinical assessment process. The positive experiences included integrating theory and practice, while negative experiences included the poor attitudes of the clinical evaluators and limited time.

Contribution: The results of this study can be used to develop targeted interventions and strategies to improve the challenges students encounter during clinical assessment.


Keywords

evaluation; experience; nursing students; pre-registration; programme; clinical competence

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 4: Quality education

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