World Nursing Education and Practice Congress

THEME: "Advancing Global Nursing Through Education and Excellence in Practice"

img2 21-22 Sep 2026
img2 Lisbon, Portugal
Tanya Andrewes

Tanya Andrewes

Bournemouth University, United Kingdom

Title: Nursing Leadership and Educator Collaboration: The Catalyst for Meaningful Post-Registration Learning for Service Improvement in Nursing Practice.


Biography

Dr. Tanya Andrewes is a Senior Lecturer in Adult Nursing at Bournemouth University, Dorset, England, with a background in oncology nursing. She has experience in both traditional and distance education settings. Her interests focus on open education, accessibility, and equitable learning. Her doctoral research explored how registered nurses use free online resources for continuing professional development and revalidation with the UK Nursing and Midwifery Council.

Abstract

This research was driven by the global decentralisation of nurses’ continuous professional development practice. The responsibility lies with registered nurses to source their own post-registration learning, with free online learning one recommended solution. The research objectives were to explore how registered nurses use free online learning resources for post-registration learning. Using a constructivist grounded theory methodology, eighteen registered nurses across clinical practice and education-based settings were interviewed. Data analysis resulted in two theoretical categories: ‘learning as a social endeavour’ and ‘being swallowed up in practice’. The categories reflected challenges that nurses faced in using free online learning as continuous professional development, resulting from employing organisations’ control over their ongoing learning.


Findings revealed how the burden of online mandatory training created barriers to nurses’ independent use of free online learning. Mandatory training was often completed in nurses’ own time, using their own resources. Consequently, they learnt strategies to complete it quickly to meet training deadlines. They adopted similar approaches to completing free online learning for professional development, so they could meet revalidation deadlines. Nurses described how using free online resources created feelings of ‘learning in a silo’, disconnected from their professional responsibility to engage in service improvement. 


The research findings were synthesised in the context of organisational learning theory. A theoretical framework was developed from the research, which supports the integration of free online learning into meaningful team-based organisational learning activities for service improvement. Nursing leadership and partnership with educators was highlighted as instrumental in manipulating the conditions in the local practice setting, supporting social learning that could develop into organisational learning for service improvement. Partnership between nursing leaders and educators is a catalyst for individual and organisational learning through skills development around online learning and through the provision of education and research resources.