Journal
COLLEGIAN
Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 337-342Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.colegn.2021.09.007
Keywords
Dyad; Near-peer teaching; Nursing student; Metacognition; Secondary analysis; Shared regulation
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This study explores the shared guidance and metacognitive and behavioral regulation in undergraduate nursing students involved in dyadic near-peer teaching. The findings suggest that working in dyads provides a supportive environment for near-peer teaching, enhancing students' self-efficacy and metacognitive abilities through shared regulation and consideration of different perspectives.
Problem: There is a lack of understanding of undergraduate nursing students' shared regulatory behaviours and metacognitive processes as they learn to teach in dyad. Insights into this pedagogical approach can provide the opportunity to re-evaluate the best approaches to learning in the collaborative learning space. Aim: The aim of this study was to explore the shared guidance and metacognitive and behavioural regulation of undergraduate nursing students involved in dyadic near-peer teaching. Method: Secondary qualitative data analysis was conducted on data collected from an earlier study of 14 interviews, which explored final year students undertaking dyadic near-peer teaching. Data were analysed using NVivo12 to identify categories of meaning. Finding: Two major categories and five subcategories evolved from the data, regulation of affective behaviours with associated subcategories of anxiety and self-doubt and shared guidance with subcategories of coregulation of cognition, metacognition, and critical thinking. Discussion: An important finding is that working in dyad provided a supportive environment for near-peer teaching, enhancing students' self-efficacy and metacognition ability through shared regulation by considering alternate perspectives, through shared understandings, and negotiating different viewpoints. Conclusion: It was identified that a dyadic approach in near-peer teaching supports metacognitive shared regulation and metacognitive growth; hence, influencing self-directed, long-life learners, a core nursing profession requirement. (C) 2021 Australian College of Nursing Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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