Patriacia Benner
Patriacia Benner
Knowledge development in a practice discipline consists of extending practical knowledge (knowhow) through theory based scientific investigations and through the clinical experience in the practice of that discipline (Benner, 1984)
Her research was aimed at discovering if there were distinguishable, characteristic differences in the novices and experts descriptions of the same clinical incident.
Client/ Person
The person is a selfinterpreting being, that is the person does not come into the world predefined but gets defined in the course of living a life.- Dr. Benner
Health
Dr. Benner focuses on the lived experience of being healthy and being ill. Health is defined as what can be assessed, whereas well being is the human experience of health or wholeness. Well being and being ill are understood as distinct ways of being in the world.
Environment/Situation
Benner uses situation rather than environment because situation conveys a social environment with social definition and meanifulness. To be situated implies that one has a past, present, and future and that all of these aspects.influence the current situation.- Dr. Benner
Nursing
Nursing is described as a caring relationship, an enabling condition of connection and concern. -Dr. Benner Caring is primary because caring sets up the possibility of giving and receiving help. Nursing is viewed as a caring practice whose science is guided by the moral art and ethics of care and responsibility. Dr. Benner understands that nursing practice as the care and study of the lived experience of health, illness, and disease and the relationships among the three elements.
Novice
The person has no background experience of the situation in which he or she is involved. There is difficulty discerning between relevant and irrelevant aspects of the situation. Generally this level applies to nursing students.
Advanced Beginner
The advance beginner stage in the Dreyfus model develops when the person can demonstrate marginally acceptable performance having coped with enough real situations to note, or to have pointed out by mentor, the recurring meaningful components of the situation. Nurses functioning at this level are guided by rules and oriented by task completion.
Competent
The competent stage is the most pivotal in clinical learning because the learner must begin to recognize patterns and determine which elements of the situation warrant attention and which can be ignored. The competent nurse devises new rules and reasoning procedures for a plan while applying learned rules for action on the basis of the relevant facts of that situation.
Proficient
The performer perceives the information as a whole (total picture) rather than in terms of aspects and performance. Proficient level is a qualitative leap beyond the competent. Nurses at this level demonstrate a new ability to see changing relevance in a situation including the recognition and the implementation of skilled responses to the situation as is it evolves.
Expert
Fifth stage of the Dreyfus model is achieved when the expert performer no longer relies on analytical principals to connect her or his understanding of the situation to an appropriate action