NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted
The NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted podcast, brought to you by the National League for Nursing Center for Innovation in Education Excellence, offers episodes on the how-to of innovation and transformation in nursing education. Each conversation embraces the power of innovation to inspire educators and propel nursing education forward.
NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted
Assessment of Nurse Educator Leadership: Instrument Development and Psychometric Analysis
In this episode of NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted, Dr. Steven Palazzo hosts a discussion with Dr. Anne Krouse and Dr. Karen Morin about their newly developed instrument designed to assess nurse educators’ self-perception of leadership competency. As co-authors of the study, Dr. Krouse and Dr. Morin share insights into the instrument’s development and its potential impact on leadership in nursing education. Based on their earlier research, the tool aims to help nursing faculty evaluate their leadership attributes. Learn more about their work, “Assessment of Nurse Educator Leadership: Instrument Development and Psychometric Analysis.”
Krouse, Anne M.; Patterson, Barbara J.; Morin, Karen H.. Assessment of Nurse Educator Leadership: Instrument Development and Psychometric Analysis. Nursing Education Perspectives 45(4):p 208-212, 7/8 2024. | DOI: 10.1097/01.NEP.0000000000001259
Krouse, Anne M.; Patterson, Barbara J.; Morin, Karen H.. Assessment of Nurse Educator Leadership: Instrument Development and Psychometric Analysis. Nursing Education Perspectives 45(4):p 208-212, 7/8 2024. | DOI: 10.1097/01.NEP.0000000000001259
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[Music] Welcome to this episode of NLN podcast Nursing EDge Unscripted. I'm your host, Dr. Steven Palazzo, a member of the editorial board for Nursing Education Perspectives. In this episode we will discuss relevance, clarity and reliability and validity of a new instrument for nurse educators that measures self-perception of leadership competency. My guests today are Dr. Anne Krouse, Dean, Widener University School of Nursing in Chester, Pennsylvania. And with us also is Dr. Karen Morin, Professor Emerita at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and visiting professor at Teacher's College, Columbia University. We will discuss their article,
"Assessment of Nurse Educator Leadership:Instrument Development and Psychometric Analysis." This article can be found in the July-August 2024 issue of Nursing education perspectives. Welcome to our guests. Thank you. Happy to be here great to be here. Wonderful to have you. So let's get started. Briefly if you could describe the aims of your study and how it relates to your earlier work on nurse educator leadership and leadership and nursing education tool that was developed. So I'll get started. So Dr. Barbara Patterson and I did the initial study where we identified the competencies for nursing...nurse faculty leaders and you know when you look at leadership development and how do you translate this empirical research into something practical for someone to use, to develop themselves as a leader, we decided that we would do the instrument, develop the instrument to provide a tool that people could really use to evaluate their own personal leadership. And important is to note is that our definition of leaders when we did the initial study and as well as when we did the instrument development was that it's not just someone who's in a formal leadership position, but it's someone who is a leader in many different ways or sees themself as a leader of nursing education. So we brought in Dr. Morin, who was an expert in instrument development and developed a great partnership. So I'll turn it over to Karen now. Right. Yes. I was delighted to be invited to and be part of this team and though my scholarship certainly hasn't been quite as directed in leadership, my practice certainly has been in leadership because I've been so involved in leadership development programs and so I think that's a nice way to merge what you've been doing in your life with the scholarship that's required of it. And it's, I've always believed that we are missing an opportunity in nursing education when we don't acknowledge and foster the leadership of faculty writ large, not those that necessarily, well, those that are in positions of leadership as well, but all of us I think bring leadership abilities to the table. And I think the instrument that's been developed is a really nice way to help us understand and appreciate what attributes we have to bring to the table. That's a great summary of of the work in the in the tool you developed. So specifically, if we were going to ask when we're looking at a tool like this, how or describe how useful do you believe the tool is, the LEN, for measuring perceived leadership competency and diverse populations populations such as people of color, LGBTQI, and men specifically. Perhaps we're seeing what is important for traditional demographic nurse leaders and missing a new generation of leaders with different ideas about leadership. What are your thoughts on this? Go ahead Karen. Well, I have been thinking a lot about that question and I don't think, that's not, we did not elicit those demographics in terms of describing our particular participants. I think it's a really great point. I might say, because I've really been thinking about this, that these attributes, when you think about them, the four major ones I think really are pretty universal. And so I wonder whether or not I would want to explore whether or not different populations perceive it differently. I mean, it's an interesting thought and one to pursue because I'd love to be proven wrong as always. But I really wonder about that. I was just reading another book on leadership and and the qualities are things like gratitude and empathy and resilience and I would argue that irrespective of who we are we all bring those to the table so that's, I'll yield to Anne. I agree 100% with Karen. I do think there's value in looking at the data to see whether there are significant differences and I think we'll have the opportunity going forward. Already we're getting a lot of nurse researchers asking for use of the instrument and so we will have, as they share their raw data with us, we will have the opportunity to possibly explore other populations that it's used with. And even we've asked by individuals globally to be able to translate the instrument and explore it from that perspective as well. So I, my initial sense is, as Karen says, that these are really very global competencies but there might be differences. And we just had a discussion about our next steps with the instrument development. One is that we are going to publish data that we have related to an international study that we did with the instrument looking at the psychometrics. But one of the things that has been, as a dean, on my mind has been have things changed since the pandemic with nursing education leadership and particularly related to resilience, crisis management, preparation for crisis management, and how does that play into leadership competencies, not only for someone who's in a formal leadership role like I am, but for faculty you know who had a pivot really quickly and who are still experiencing the effects of the pandemic on students and their learning deficits. Well, oh go ahead Karen. No, and I'm thinking as as we move forward with this is to also gather some of that information to which you referred in terms of identity, right, of our respondents, so that will be really helpful so, anyway. Yeah, I appreciate, I'm happy to hear that the tool is is being adopted by others and hopefully podcasts like this will help encourage others to look at the tool and its relevance for them and use it. I see, you know, I guess the question for me and why I had that question in there was thinking about, you know, as a gay male myself, do I see empathy and gratitude differently in how I practice leadership, right? And my suspicion would be probably yes, a little bit, and so that would be some information that would be really helpful to reveal if there is any kind of difference and if so, how does that translate then into the delivery, right? Correct. So the attribute you could probably have a universal definition but how it plays out maybe different. And we know that already when we look at male-female communication, leader communication. We see that for certain. So it is an interesting perspective and one worth pursuing for sure. Yeah, the attribute doesn't change much, the definition of it, but how it is expressed or displayed could look differently depending on the demographic, right. And I think about the the instrument development and we use the test statements that came from the original study and the development of this instrument. So perhaps even as we see differences like we should see differences, right, as we look at different populations, it might be helpful for us to go back and do qualitative studies with these groups to go back and do another Delphi to see whether we can refine these task statements a little bit so that they're more applicable to a wider variety of populations. Right. How would nurse leaders use this tool? And again, a nurse leader not being like a formal definition but how we self-identify maybe as a leader. How would someone in that position use these leadership competencies in their nursing, with their nursing faculty? I'm all about faculty development and so I think, I mean, and I know that deans are always about faculty development so I think this is, it's it's a tool in the toolkit of assessing your abilities as a leader and there are many, many, we know that. So I look at this as an additional one. And what's nice about this from my perspective: remember, I'm the one that was brought on the newest kid on the block here, is the is the fact that this is nursing and so we have gathered information about nurses. So I love Kouzes and Posner but Kouzes and Posner is a broader, a broader perspective, you know different perspective, and the fact that this instrument was developed based on input from nurse faculty I think makes it a strength. And then I would have the conversation and say, gee, let's have all of you have leadership essential . Let's look and see where you are and how we can help you develop further you mentioned Kouzes and Posner. That just brings back a lot of memories from about 12 years ago at the Nurse Faculty Leadership Academy. I mean, that's one of the frameworks that is embedded in me that continues to this day. Yeah and their model too is really global as well. So you know, when you think about, when you think about the the traits. I'm trying to remember exactly the use, it's an inventory, so yes inventory, but so you know, model the way like it's just very global but it is how you implement it in your own practice as a leader in terms of how maybe is more reflective of your own identity. As we're talking about this, wouldn't it be fun to them say, okay, we've looked at the instrument, we've developed and then compare it to see whether what are the attributes? Do they surface over time so that we know that there's some great consistency in terms of that or maybe there are really important differences, right, in how we perceive leadership as nurses and so that would a great exercise, another study to do. For our listeners there's a lot of opportunities here to to work with this tool and help develop this tool and refine it, right. And you've got two great leaders here that probably would be very encouraging for that. Any any final thoughts or anything you want to leave our listeners with that we didn't cover related to your article? I think just, you know, one thought is that I really encourage faculty that are listening to this to pursue their own leadership development in whatever way they want to go forward as a leader, whether it is a formal role or just being a leader in their school, in their course, whatever it is. It's so badly needed in nursing education and nurses that come from practice that go into nursing education bring a lot to the table in terms of leadership skills already. So we just really encourage people to take that plunge. I would agree. I read a book that said act like a leader and then think like a leader. If you keep acting like a leader eventually you realize that oh, maybe I am a leader, and you can move forward. So I echo Anne's comments. All of us have leadership potential and I think it's up to us to be able to examine that and appreciate it and as faculty we have a responsibility to demonstrate that. I want to thank both of you personally for your championing leadership and nursing education over the years and having you both as guests today has been very beneficial for not only myself but I know our listeners they'll be very excited to to listen to your perspectives. I appreciate your time and expertise in broadening our understanding of the work that you've been doing and how we can introduce some of this work in our own institutions. And to our listeners, I just want to mention again that if you had not had the opportunity,
please look for their work:"Assessment of Nurse Educator Leadership: Instrument Development and Psychometric Analysis" in the July-August 2024 issue of Nursing Education Perspectives. And thank you both for joining us and thank you to our listeners too. Thank you. Thank you.[Music]