Abstract:
Background: Competent and well-trained faculties are necessary for quality education. The
presence of with inadequate skill and knowledge is an indicator for the presence of gaps in
education. However, the clinical competency and teaching skills of Ethiopian nurse educators has
not been studied well.
Objective: The objective of this study was to assess nurse educators’ clinical skill competency
and clinical teaching skill following a mixed methods study design.
Methods: I used a mixed study design following transcultural tool adaptation and validation.
Quantitative data were collected from 282 nurse educators and 2820 nursing students across
fourteen higher education institutions in Ethiopia selected by simple random sampling. The
qualitative component employed purposive sampling. Objective III was the transcultural
adaptation and validation of the Maastricht Clinical Teaching Questionnaire (MCTQ). This tool
originally contains 14 items under five factors: modeling, coaching, articulation, exploration, and
a safe learning environment. Virtual and face-to-face interviews were conducted (Objective II, and
III), and skill performance was observed during Objective Structured Clinical Examinations
(Objective I). Self-administered questionnaires were used for educators' self-assessment and
students' appraisal of clinical educators (Objective IV). Analytical methods included Colaizzi's
seven-step content analysis method, confirmatory factor analysis, Pearson correlation, logistic
regression, and basic measures of central tendency. Findings were disseminated through
presentations and publications in reputable journals to contribute to the scientific community's
knowledge base.
Result: Objective Structured Clinical Examination of nursing clinical skills showed competency
levels ranging from 29.47% to 62.32%, with an overall competence rate of 27.05% among 207
nurse educators. While some skills, like cardiac history taking, showed higher competency level,
areas like progress assessment showed lower levels. In-depth interviews with 12 educators
revealed four themes and 24 sub-themes relating to challenge in skill acquisition and maintenance
challenges. Themes were: feelings of inadequacy, seeking support, self-development, and decline
of clinical skills. The Amharic version of the 18-item Maastricht Clinical Teaching Questionnaire
(MCTQ) was found to be culturally appropriate and internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha =
0.94). The five-factor model fit the data well (CFI = 0.94, RMSEA = 0.069, chi-square/degree of
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freedom = 0.92, TLI = 0.930). When used for self-assessment and student evaluations, educators'
performance in the modeling, coaching, and exploration domains of clinical teaching was found
to be low. Only 51.06% of educators proficient were in articulation, with just around one-third
proficient in modeling (33.26%), coaching (33.04%), and exploration (30.38%). Students
perceived 65.68% of clinical educators as effective in teaching and applying critical techniques.
Conclusion and recommendations
The study assessed Ethiopian nurse educators' clinical and teaching skills using various research
methods. The finding from this study showed, critical gaps in the clinical and teaching skills of
Ethiopian nurse educators, revealing challenges in role transition, limited clinical engagement,
inadequate support for competence maintenance, and low skill performance. This underlines the
urgent need for policy-level interventions to address significant shortcomings. This might include
design of long tearm strategy for addressing gaps in educator capacity building, making clinical
engagement for educator mandatory, revision of requirements to be an educator and increase
clinical exposure opportunities. Furthermore, policymakers must allocate resources for further
research aimed at identifying tailored interventions to address the specific needs of Ethiopian nurse
educators. Lastly, enforcing educator commitment to continuous professional development is vital
to ensure sustained improvements in clinical teaching quality and, ultimately, the provision of
high-quality nursing education in Ethiopia.