Why Do New Grads Lack Critical Thinking Skills?

New grads often lack critical thinking and it's a gap that preceptors can help with. Nurses General Nursing Article

New Grads Lack Critical Thinking ... Why?

Actually, it's expected and part of their development. Patricia Benner says new grads are in the Novice stage for about 6 months. Novices are rule-based and inclined to follow instructions without questions.

No Context

Melissa, a new grad, received her patient back from Surgery. The patient was an elderly female and accompanied by a PACU nurse. Together they transferred her to the bed and got her settled.

Less than thirty minutes later, the patient arrested. Later it was determined she was overly sedated. She was resuscitated and intubated but later died in the ICU. 

When receiving the patient, Melissa took her cue from the PACU nurse, who did not seem concerned at any point. Melissa had no prior experience assessing a post-op patient and did not know they can go from responsive to asleep in a short amount of time. She didn’t know that falling asleep in the middle of a sentence could be a serious sign of over-sedation and didn't know how a normal post-op patient looks. An experienced nurse would have checked in on the patient more frequently and would have been cognizant of the worst that could happen. 

It was devastating and Melissa quit nursing shortly after the incident. 

note: Unfortunately, her preceptor was down the hall admitting a patient from ED because the charge nurse and house supervisor saw the new grad as an "extra nurse" when they should have viewed the preceptor and preceptee as one working unit, not two.

No Sense of Urgency

New grads may lack a sense of urgency. Jennifer, a new grad, was passing meds when her hospital-issued phone rang. “Hello, this is the Lab. I’m calling about your patient Emma Nelson in room 325-1. Her potassium level is 5.8” Jennifer replied impatiently “I’m passing meds. Call me back in 30 minutes” and stuffed the phone back in her pocket.

To Jennifer, the most important thing is performing her tasks. To Jennifer's mind, she is successful when/if she can complete the list of tasks she's been assigned. She doesn’t yet see the big picture. For example, performing a patient assessment is a task, but she may not see how it drives the plan of care for the day.

A new grad doesn’t know whether a drop in urine output in a post-op patient is expected or if he/she should be alarmed. Will he/she get in trouble if they don’t call or ridiculed if they do

Limited Problem-Solving

Josh has been going into his patient’s room repeatedly to silence the IV infusion pump. He presses the silence key but in a few minutes it beeps again, so he goes back in and presses the silence key again. Finally, the preceptor goes in, pulls back the sheet, and tells the patient to straighten their arm. 

Later Josh’s nursing assistant reports a temp of 101 in one of his patients. Josh feels he should do something (maybe give Tylenol?) but doesn’t really stop to reflect what may be causing the elevated temperature.

Nursing school doesn’t prepare our new nurses for independent practice. New grads have book learning, and rules, but haven’t yet learned that patients don’t follow the textbook. Gray areas and ambiguity are difficult because they are comfortable with black and white thinking but can’t tolerate ambiguity.

They may have overwhelming anxiety and are very concerned about their performance. This leaves little bandwidth for reflection and problem-solving.

Critical Thinking

How can we help them develop critical thinking?

One way the preceptor can help is by answering questions with questions. 

  • If a preceptee asks about a certain lab, say a high white count, respond with “What do you think about that?”
  • Encourage them to journal and reflect. It’s really beneficial for a new grad to look back in their journal and see how far they’ve come since week one. 
  • Ask them indications for medications when they are passing meds. Not just indications for the medication, but why is their patient is receiving the medication?
  • After a provider rounds, ask them why the provider ordered a certain lab test, or discontinued a medication.
  • Before calling a provider, ask them to anticipate what information the provider needs
  • Before a procedure, use the What’s-the-Worst-that-can-Happen method: “So when we’re pulling that sheath/inserting that NG/removing that central line, what’s the worst that can happen?” 
  • Follow up with “And then what will you do?”

It’s not helpful to tell a new grad to “trust your gut” because they don’t have a gut! It will only cause more pressure to now expect them to have a “gut feeling”. They do not yet recognize patterns or normals. They must recognize normal before they can recognize abnormal.

I think nurses should receive far more training before they practice independently, more along a medical model, with increased, supervised responsibility. Instead, after 12ish weeks of orientation, they are pretty much treated as a fully experienced nurse.

This isn't likely to change any time soon, so what we can do is help them develop problem-solving skills.

What ways have you found to help new grads learn to think critically?

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
On 8/22/2021 at 3:58 PM, JKL33 said:

I do think learners can manage principles and be asked to think about how they might be applied in a real situation, sort of like what Hannahbanana posted about. If we're saying that we want to produce critical thinkers then teaching principles as well as basic sequences is a valid idea.

Agree, I do think the principles and the "why" are highly important, to adult learners, especially, and it's also true that when first learning a task, the steps are essential.

As an educator I know new grads prefer and need rules to learn. Learning is a process, with rules (memorization) at the bottom of the pyramid. And with new grads most of their bandwidth is taken up by learning and following the steps. Later on comes analysis (critical thinking), at the top of the pyramid.

You have to be a novice, learning tasks step-by-step, before you can become an expert. For example, I can tie shoelaces quite well, I've mastered it ? . As a child, I learned how to, step-by-step. But when I tried to teach my granddaughter, I couldn't break it down. I could only do it quickly and intuitively (without conscious thought).  We were at 2 ends of the spectrum- me the expert, and my granddaughter the novice.

The goal is to teach new grads critical thinking in order to connect the dots and become competent nurses. 

2 hours ago, JKL33 said:

I do think learners can manage principles and be asked to think about how they might be applied in a real situation, sort of like what Hannahbanana posted about. If we're saying that we want to produce critical thinkers then teaching principles as well as basic sequences is a valid idea.

I remember I was once in one of my patient rooms while a nursing instructor was there with a few students, one of whom was about to insert a foley cathether. The clincial instructor was a charge nurse and overall a fairly good nurse in my department. So I was pretty surprised when she declared that it's too hard to pick up cotton balls with plastic tweezers so the student was to simply hold them with her fingers to cleanse the patient. There is a case of someone who apparently knew sequences but threw important principles right out the window. ??‍♀️

I don't know, I don't have all the answers but I like Wuzzie's approach and it is what I do as well. I think it's really important for learners to think through what needs to happen and not become stymied with steps and rules (the ones which are extraneous).

I agree completely that understanding the principles behind what we are doing is necessary.

The example you gave of the foley catheter shows important principles being ignored and doesn't follow the steps properly.

I agree with everyone who has said that it's very important for learners to think through what needs to happen.  When students/new nurses are guided by competent, experienced nurses, who understand the principles of what needs to be done, and know how to practice safely, I think the learner's process of innovative thinking can be very valuable.  I think the caveat is that the nurse doing the guiding is a sufficiently experienced and competent practitioner themself, or bad results can happen.  

I agree with you that there are some things that we are taught that are extraneous.  Also, as practice changes over time, more things become obsolete.  

Great article Nurse Beth (and great story Hannahbanana)! One of the biggest eye openers post nursing school was my supervisor(s) indifference to policy and procedure. In nursing school, "Always follow P&P" was pounded into our heads. Students could be removed from clinical as offenders to this mantra (Losing one's license was the dreaded fear instilled in us). In reality, patient throughput is the highest priority and the expectation is... policies that interfere with cash flow should be ignored.

Specializes in Psychiatry, Community, Nurse Manager, hospice.
On 8/21/2021 at 11:43 AM, JKL33 said:

What are you thinking could happen? We are a struggling profession largely regarded as a blue collar role. We are a profession with our own knowledge and ethics largely employed by employers looking for "workers."

Educational institutions want to make money flooding the market with more of us. They don't seem to have an interest in providing true high-quality education and there are no forces holding them to task on that. In fact the standards are so low that dubious entities have been able to get in on the nursing education action. If the program stinks, no problem, just curate board pass rates by making people pass an exit exam at the very end of the program as a condition of graduation/authorization to test (after their tuition dollars have been collected). Things like this happen not just in mail-order degree programs but even well-regarded and sometimes prestigious universities.

Employers, for their part, are happy to have nurses pumped out at top speed. They appear to have calculated that running their floors and units with mostly new grads does not compromise their business interests. So...not sure why they would want to spend money to help new nurses form a more solid foundation. They have shown time and again that they would rather spend money fooling the public than strengthening nurses.

Mostly true, except the part about flooding the market. The market is not flooded with nurses. Nurses are in short supply with no end in sight.

Its an important distinction because the shortage contributes greatly to the other problems. 
 

4 minutes ago, FolksBtrippin said:

Mostly true, except the part about flooding the market. The market is not flooded with nurses. Nurses are in short supply with no end in sight.

I hear that is true in some areas.

I don't see any evidence of it in my region. I also think there may be a shortage of nurses who want to work in poor conditions rather than a shortage of people qualified to do nursing work. Overall I am not so sure that the shortage narrative doesn't contribute to short staffing in a much worse way: It is an ever-existing excuse no matter how many nurses there actually are.

Specializes in Psychiatry, Community, Nurse Manager, hospice.
On 8/23/2021 at 7:40 AM, JKL33 said:

I hear that is true in some areas.

I don't see any evidence of it in my region. I also think there may be a shortage of nurses who want to work in poor conditions rather than a shortage of people qualified to do nursing work. Overall I am not so sure that the shortage narrative doesn't contribute to short staffing in a much worse way: It is an ever-existing excuse no matter how many nurses there actually are.

There is a shortage of people who want to work in poor conditions and also a shortage of people qualified to do nursing work. It’s both. Shortages create that exact problem. Shortages create more difficult positions that no one wants. Because nursing gets harder when there aren’t enough of us.

The shortage isn’t just a narrative. The numbers don’t lie. We have an actual shortage problem that contributes to all the other problems and the general brokenness of the system. 

Specializes in Psych, Addictions, SOL (Student of Life).
On 8/23/2021 at 7:32 AM, FolksBtrippin said:

Mostly true, except the part about flooding the market. The market is not flooded with nurses. Nurses are in short supply with no end in sight.

Its an important distinction because the shortage contributes greatly to the other problems. 

Repeating yet again there is NP nursing shortage!

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
On 8/23/2021 at 7:53 AM, FolksBtrippin said:

There is a shortage of people who want to work in poor conditions and also a shortage of people qualified to do nursing work. It’s both. Shortages create that exact problem. Shortages create more difficult positions that no one wants. Because nursing gets harder when there aren’t enough of us.

The shortage isn’t just a narrative. The numbers don’t lie. We have an actual shortage problem that contributes to all the other problems and the general brokenness of the system. 

After years of reading about nursing shortages here and elsewhere, I believe much of the confusion comes from defining of terms.  There are lots of variables.  Your location alone is a big factor.

There's no doubt that the AACN and the ANA pushes the idea of a shortage and hones it's numbers to make it appear so.

I remember the days of a real shortage, when many women shied away from nursing, teaching and secretarial careers.

My recollection was the law of supply and demand kicked in and new grads were offered multi-thousand dollar sign-on bonusses, unheard of flex-time staffing, and even cruises.

Again, though I was in a large metropolitan city with many large hospitals, so there was a fierce competition.

I want to say, to address the topic generally.  I don't think new grads lack critical thinking skills.  You need to memorize a whole lot, know where to find the info you don't have, and work long enough that your brain puts things together with less conscious struggle.

Specializes in orthopedic/trauma, Informatics, diabetes.

There is a shortage of everyone! Short CNAs, short RNs, short NP/PAs. Short on bed space. 

We just hired a lot of new RNs. There aren't enough veteran nurses to be charge and precept, so we have inexperienced preceptors teaching bad habits and inexperienced charge nurses that don't know how to make a proper assignment. 

I am a newish (10 years) RN but a boomer (and proud LOL) I see a lack of sense of urgency, looking at numbers rather then their pt. Worrying about a policy in much to much of a literal sense and, as a weekend RN there are surgical residents on call (teaching hosp. in July/August) and the new nurses want to call them for everything!  Stuff they are not going to know yet. 

Covid has really put a lot of stress on everyone. People are leaving, but I am not sure where they are going. It's horrible in every discipline and setting. 

I figure the ones that are going to survive school and orientation during this time will be OK  ❤️ 

Specializes in LTC & Rehab Supervision.

Flat out, all nursing school cares about is if you can pass exams/the NCLEX. Nothing else. That's that.

Specializes in CCRN, Geriatrics.

In my opinion, 

the lack of critical thinking comes from not being knowledgeable. Also the fear of being a new grad. Nursing school does not prepare you for the some of the situations you encounter in nursing. Also it depends on the amount of training provided by the facility. Give a nurse adequate staffing and support I'm sure it would be a good environment to learn in. 

I see new grads orienting new grads.  How does a person who hasn't been a nurse long enough to develop critical thinking skills themselves teach critical thinking skills to anybody else?  Most nurses who work in critical care as we speak have graduated less than 2 years ago and don't know what MAP stands for, how to calculate it, or what the signifigance of it even is.  They just know that the levophed order says "titrate for a MAP greater than 65, and MAP is the number in the parentheses."  Thank god for smart pumps, we'd be screwed if we had to teach these nurses how to figure out how many ml/hr to run the levophed drip at utilizing the "K-constant".  I don't have that kind of patience.  Not even going there.  New grads orienting new grads.