

Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Prepare for your exams
Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points to download
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Community
Ask the community for help and clear up your study doubts
Discover the best universities in your country according to Docsity users
Free resources
Download our free guides on studying techniques, anxiety management strategies, and thesis advice from Docsity tutors
Clarity - Being easily understood or precise in thought and style; considered a gateway standard because a statement cannot be evaluated for accuracy or precision if it is ambiguous. Accuracy: - Representing something in a true and correct way. Precision - Providing sufficient detail to understand exactly what was meant. Relevance: - Focusing on facts and ideas directly related and pertinent to a topic. Depth: - Getting beneath the surface of the topic or problem to identify and manage related complexities. Breadth: - Considering a topic, problem, or issue from every relevant viewpoint. Logic - Using a mutually supportive and sensible combination of thoughts and facts to form a conclusion. Significance: - Concentrating on the most important information (e.g., concepts, facts) when considering an issue. Fairness: - Thinking or acting in accord with reason and without bias
Typology: Exams
1 / 2
This page cannot be seen from the preview
Don't miss anything!
Clarity - Being easily understood or precise in thought and style; considered a gateway standard because a statement cannot be evaluated for accuracy or precision if it is ambiguous. Accuracy: - Representing something in a true and correct way. Precision - Providing sufficient detail to understand exactly what was meant. Relevance: - Focusing on facts and ideas directly related and pertinent to a topic. Depth: - Getting beneath the surface of the topic or problem to identify and manage related complexities. Breadth: - Considering a topic, problem, or issue from every relevant viewpoint. Logic - Using a mutually supportive and sensible combination of thoughts and facts to form a conclusion. Significance: - Concentrating on the most important information (e.g., concepts, facts) when considering an issue. Fairness: - Thinking or acting in accord with reason and without bias. Baseline nursing knowledge - content learned in prerequisite courses, such as liberal arts education from the arts and sciences Inductive reasoning - uses specific facts or details to draw conclusions and make generalizations Deductive reasoning - involves generating facts or details from a major theory, generalization, or premise; it proceeds from general to specific.
Which statement describes a characteristic of inductive reasoning? - Conclusions may need to be substantiated; they are not based on valid proof inferences - intellectual acts that involve conclusions being made on the basis of something. Which term is used by the NLNAC to describe the manifestation of critical thinking in nursing? - Clinical judgment What is the definition of problem solving? - A systematic, analytic approach to finding a solution to a problem Which process, based on its definition, describes the nursing process? - Problem-solving Which critical thinking intellectual standard would the nurse illustrate by asking a patient to be more specific when complaining about "just not feeling right"? - Precision Asking the question, "Is there another way to approach this problem?" aligns with which intellectual standard for critical thinking? - Breadth Which data obtained during a health assessment would require validation? - Complaint of red pin point underarm rash