Post-pandemic Implications of the Nursing Students’ Clinical Learning Environment and its Relationship to Academic Grit, Self-esteem, and Caring Behaviors: A Cross-sectional Study

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47895/

Keywords:

care behavior, clinical practicum, grit, mental health, nursing education, self-esteem, clinical learning environment

Abstract

Background. The clinical learning environment (CLE) significantly influenced the nursing students' learning experience. While clinical learning is the heart of nursing education, certain non-academic factors might be influenced by CLE. Consequently, CLE may be affected during a health crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic.

Objective. To determine the relationship between nursing students’ CLE and their academic grit, self-esteem, and caring behaviors in the Central Philippines.

Methods. A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted involving 462 nursing students enrolled during the COVID-19 pandemic. A purposive sampling technique was used to select the participants. Four self-report questionnaires were adopted to gather the data: a 42-item Clinical Learning Environment Inventory (CLEI) scale, short-form Grit (Grit-S) scale, Rosenberg’s Self-Esteem (RSE) scale, and Caring Behavior Inventory (CBI-24) scale. Spearman rho and rank-biserial correlation tools were used to analyze the data.

Results. The results indicated that the clinical learning environment was positively associated with academic grit, selfesteem, and caring behavior. Some profiles of the participants, such as age, sex, year level, type of school, leadership experiences, clinical setting experience, and willingness to be a nurse, were significantly associated with the clinical learning environment, academic grit, self-esteem, and/or caring behavior.

Conclusions. Students’ CLE influences their academic grit, self-esteem, and caring behavior. That is, students who reported a more positive perception of CLE, the higher their academic grit, self-esteem, and caring behaviors. Furthermore, some students’ profile characteristics influence CLE, academic grit, self-esteem, and caring behavior. Enhancing CLE while promoting grit, self-esteem, and caring behaviors of nursing students affiliated with hospitals or any clinical learning settings and promoting alternative means of meeting CLE competencies when face-to-face interactions are restricted during a health crisis are recommended.

 

Downloads

Published

2025-03-28

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

1.
Post-pandemic Implications of the Nursing Students’ Clinical Learning Environment and its Relationship to Academic Grit, Self-esteem, and Caring Behaviors: A Cross-sectional Study. Acta Med Philipp [Internet]. 2025 Mar. 28 [cited 2025 Apr. 4];. Available from: https://actamedicaphilippina.upm.edu.ph/index.php/acta/article/view/12031

Most read articles by the same author(s)