Why Do New Grads Lack Critical Thinking Skills?

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

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 NICU.
On 8/20/2021 at 9:27 AM, Rose_Queen said:

It seems like the expectation from the top down is that these new nurses can perform as though they’ve already got 2-3 years experience. The top needs to reset their expectations with a healthy dose of reality. 

I ll second that statement.

 

Specializes in NICU.

One thing the preceptor should be nice,not coddle but be nice,make sure they get their break an uninterrupted break.Be honest in your evaluation of their progress,don't tell them they are so wonderful and go behind their back report them to management.

We have many students rotate thru our unit,you can see who is very engaged in learning and is Ho Hum so bored,chatting.

I asked on student to draw up one cc saline in a syringe, she drew up only  3/4 full,

I told her it was not one cc, ....her answer?........"but this is a one cc syringe".....

I rest my case.?‍♀️?‍♀️

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
On 8/25/2021 at 12:15 AM, Hoosier_RN said:

The other day I was working as a tech. The nurse (about 3 years experience) had multiple IV ABXs to give, ran out of pumps. She was almost in tears in the med room because she wouldn't be able to give all of them, didn't know what to do, and MD told her they needed to be given. She had no clue how to set up and count the drip manually ?  I stopped and showed her.  

You stopped and showed her, which is really what I think the heart of teaching really is.  Thank goodness nobody waltzed in and said "you are working as a tech, you can't show her how to do that! (whole 'nother topic there)

I think there's sort of an unwritten assumption that new grads are going to be working with state of the art technology, with lots of helpers and specialized departments to back you up in a pinch.  

Here's the thing, though.  Not everybody works in those areas.  Not every facility has a Pyxis and barcode scanning. There are lots of places still using paper charting, a paper MAR, and, although I haven't seen one in years, a mercury sphygmomanometer.

Not in and of itself going to teach critical thinking, but if your only option is the low tech option, you can still get the job done.

 

Specializes in Customer service.
5 hours ago, Leader25 said:

One thing the preceptor should be nice,not coddle but be nice,make sure they get their break an uninterrupted break.Be honest in your evaluation of their progress,don't tell them they are so wonderful and go behind their back report them to management.

We have many students rotate thru our unit,you can see who is very engaged in learning and is Ho Hum so bored,chatting.

I asked on student to draw up one cc saline in a syringe, she drew up only  3/4 full,

I told her it was not one cc, ....her answer?........"but this is a one cc syringe".....

I rest my case.?‍♀️?‍♀️

I'm not the smartest in nursing classes but quite proficient with math and understand others better without hurting my back from sitting studying.  

I helped a few of my colleagues  to understand that the 100mL solution has 1 gram of medication in it and etc.  I don't know so many things in nursing, but I don't think that it's difficult to comprehend this concept. I had to grab grains of salt and drop them in the water. A colleague said to me, "That's salt. Not a drug." "Well, okay, let's pretend you're going to give this sodium to the pt who can't swallow anything down." 

I salute teachers for their dedication and patience. So, I'm a little shy to ask for help because someone else might need it more than me. I'm often mistaken to be that and this student when I work so hard to figure things out on my own. 

As a new grad orientee, I feel like there is a multitude of reasons why critical thinking is lacking in new grads for me, COVID took away from my clinical experience time where I was learning to critically think while in school along with my clinical skills practice too. Due to the shortage of nurses, I'm being precepted by a nurse who's only been a nurse for a little over a year and has no patience, and has an expectation that I should know how to do everything as if I've had experience in this role before which makes no sense seeing as I'm a new grad with no previous medical background prior. Also with the patient ratios, no one has time to sit down with new nurses to go over critical thinking.

Specializes in Med-Surg.

Good article.  We're dealing with this on my unit right now.  One new grad seems to be pretty typical in that she doesn't know what she doesn't know, but at least stops to ask questions.

The other one jumps the gun and what's to make sure all tasks are complete and she's not late so she doesn't get into trouble.  Problem is she doesn't stop to think "why did this patient almost faint on me, what do I need to assess and how do I handle it" but rather after the fact causally mentions "how do I chart that this patient almost fainted on me".   Gives blood pressure meds so as not to be late with the med but doesn't take a blood pressure and patient's discharge is canceled because her BP tanked because no baseline blood pressure was known, but it was known to be low through the night.  

Don't get me started on the "you have an extra pair of hands, and there are two of you, so you get more patients and the worst", and the tech doesn't help you or the new grad because "there's two of you and you're helping her" BS.  

 

"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?"

Is anyone else afraid to be a patient in a hospital?

On 8/25/2021 at 12:15 AM, Hoosier_RN said:

I realize that critical thinking comes from experience,  but some almost act if they don't even have the foundation set for that!

They don't.

Specializes in Primary Care, Military.
On 8/22/2021 at 10:56 AM, Emergent said:

I don't understand the rationale of denying nursing students access to clinical sites. They are a vital part of the fabric of our medical system. That was very short-sighted of the rule makers to ban them from caring for real patients. 

Didn't people at all anticipate that people like me might make an early exit from nursing after year-and-a-half of this madness? I really wonder at the intelligence of the people in charge. This is a predictable outcome and you'd better have a back-up plan. It's not just the risk of contracting Covid itself, healthcare workers' mental health is being compromised. And there are no programs or help being implemented for the many health care workers who are experiencing this. The government is too busy handing out needles to drug addicts to care about us.

 

They did the same to NP and PA students. Residents continued their training programs. I'm not sure whether medical students did or not. My program ended up shuffling our scheduled clinical courses and non-clinical courses to when we were allowed back. I effectively lived in three clinics my last year. 

Specializes in Primary Care, Military.
15 hours ago, 2BS Nurse said:

"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?"

Is anyone else afraid to be a patient in a hospital?

Nurses who don't have enough experience themselves doing the precepting, and on top of that they're understaffed. There are many hospitals that do not have any form of preceptorship program, as well, who provide teaching to their preceptors on how best to educate new graduates or even new seasoned nurses orienting to their hospital. Many, many hospitals do not have any form of organized orientation program where they spend time providing education to their new graduates, especially those they are hiring into specialty units. They, instead, want these novice nurses to "hit the ground running" and continue to skeleton staff and if they don't survive the trial by fire method, just toss them to the curb and try a new batch. 

 You only, effectively, have three years for BSN students of actual nursing education. The first year is dedicated to pre-requisite courses and other general education courses before students transition into the nursing curriculum. Nursing students only have so much clinical time, which some schools abhorrently utilize by pairing them up with these same understaffed, stressed-out staff nurses who are not paid to teach their students. Personally, I liked working with nursing students, when I had the time. I enjoy teaching and mentoring, especially when I was a young Army Officer. It's why I volunteered to work with a Cadet during their Summer program. Unfortunately, when you work on a very busy floor and you're also orienting new staff to your floor, or new Lieutenants, you don't have time to act as the clinical instructor for a school, too. This is not how my school operated and I do not understand those that do. I really feel those students are significantly losing out on the education they could be receiving by working more closely with their clinical instructor, with additional advice/discussion/procedures from staff as we have time to give. 

I don't even want to get into the crap that is finding your own preceptor for NP school or the fact that your school is really not even involved in your clinical learning, aside from talking to your preceptor for your evaluation. I just don't understand it. I loved my preceptors, as I chose wisely, but I also had connections and was lucky. I was also lucky in that my program actually did care about me, as they do their other students, and my success and would intervene on my behalf to ensure I was not stuck in a problematic preceptor situation. 

 When precepting as an RN, though, you really need more time to be able to focus on the actual -teaching- that you are doing and following up to ensure that things are going well. Communication is key. New graduates aren't going to be super fast at first. The team can't be inundated with a heavy load from the start, otherwise, you're setting them up to fail. Each individual learner is also different and it takes getting to know their learning style, how they communicate and developing a plan. It takes consistency between preceptor and new hire. Things can be bumpy at first, but when they start to click it's so beautiful. It's a process. 

What I don't understand is why we have this whole learning process so backward. Our medical colleagues understand that you can't take a professional immediately out of school, throw them on the floor, and trust them with people's lives. Why in the world do we want to do this with nurses? Interns and Residents go through some of the same growing pains. We've also learned the dangers of "working them like dogs" in the safety risks of too many hours. They worked me like a dog as a new 2LT. Be careful there. It burned me down working four twelves a week, being called in on my call day, and then being called in when I wasn't on call too. There comes a point where you don't know if you're coming or going. Or, for more fun, you nearly pass out at a physical fitness test. 

Specializes in Dialysis.

I'm going to add this: critical thinking, in and of itself cannot be taught. The components of each individual situation can be learned, to an open mind. Think-a patient crashing, a new skill being learned, etc. A preceptor can't sit you down and teach you critical thinking, as it is a process of forming knowledge, not a concrete idea. A preceptor can help you process the "why, how, and when" of certain situations,  but cannot make it stick, or help you form the pathway to apply that to other situations. "Critical thinking", also known by many other names, is a method that used to be the way things were taught in elementary school, and up. Now, these poor students are taught to a test bank, regardless of profession or grade level in school

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
7 hours ago, HarleyvQuinn said:

 

What I don't understand is why we have this whole learning process so backward. Our medical colleagues understand that you can't take a professional immediately out of school, throw them on the floor, and trust them with people's lives. Why in the world do we want to do this with nurses? Interns and Residents go through some of the same growing pains. 

I agree with the medical model of training. New grads need progressive responsibility and supervision.