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Exploring Nursing Students' Experiences in a Brief Virtual Reality-Enhanced Workshop: Cross-Sectional Exploratory

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Brief virtual reality (VR) workshops enhanced first-semester nursing students' understanding of foundational concepts. Students perceived VR positively, highlighting its value as a supplemental learning tool in nursing education.

Keywords:
academic library makerspacecommunity of inquirycross-sectional studieseducationeducation 4.0experiential learningnursingvirtual reality

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Area of Science:

  • Nursing Education
  • Educational Technology
  • Virtual Reality (VR)

Background:

  • Limited evidence exists on using brief, optional virtual reality (VR) for foundational nursing concepts in early education.
  • Little is known about student and teacher perceptions of VR as a low-stakes, supplemental strategy in nursing programs.
  • Investigating VR's pedagogical value and scalability in nursing curricula is crucial.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore student and teacher experiences with a brief, optional VR workshop for first-semester nursing students.
  • To assess student perceptions of cognitive, social, and teaching presence within the VR learning environment.
  • To understand the feasibility and pedagogical value of supplemental VR in early nursing education.

Main Methods:

  • A cross-sectional evaluation at a Swedish university involving a single-session VR workshop.
  • Workshop combined VR headset exposures, peer vital-sign practice, and guided debriefing aligned with the Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework.
  • Data collected via questionnaires (VR perception, CoI instrument) and teacher reflections from a small sample of first-semester nursing students and teachers.

Main Results:

  • Most students found VR enhanced analysis, exploration, conceptual understanding, engagement, and relevance.
  • Community of Inquiry (CoI) ratings indicated moderately positive perceptions, with cognitive presence highest.
  • Students noted links between theory and embodied experience, alongside practical implementation challenges.

Conclusions:

  • Brief VR exposures, inquiry, and debriefing were perceived as pedagogically valuable for foundational physiological concepts.
  • Structured, low-stakes VR appears feasible as a supplemental strategy in early nursing education.
  • Findings suggest potential scalability for VR-enhanced learning within nursing curricula, despite logistical considerations.