Authors

  1. Barnes, Joshua DNP, APRN, FNP-BC, NP-C, CCRN, CNEn

Article Content

Student icebreakers are a necessary component in social-emotional learning. Interactive icebreaker introductions foster an environment that promotes character development, teamwork, trust, mutual respect, and goal setting to create a sense of community and model effective communication.1 During an on-campus simulation experience for Family Nurse Practitioner students, a small class of peers were paired in dyads and asked to collect data and gather a history on each other. A PowerPoint slide was created and shared as a template on which to elicit student thinking. Items on the PowerPoint slide included name, achievements, work experience, scholarship, hobbies, and education. Supplemental Digital Content, Figure 1 available at http://links.lww.com/NE/B201, is an example of the PowerPoint slide shared with students. After gathering data on each other, students were then asked to organize and present collected information in the Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation (SBAR) format. Goal-directed learning principles created a positive and meaningful learning experience for students. Faculty indicated the introduction of SBAR as a part of an icebreaker to model effective communication among nurses built on previous learning and enabled professionalism, inclusivity, respect, positive communication, and mutual support.

 

Reference

 

1. Dressel DP. Breaking the ice to build relationships: using icebreakers to create new relationships, promote emotional safety, and incorporate social and emotional learning. J Phys Educ Rec Dance. 2020;91(5):51-54. doi:10.1080/07303084.2020.1739434 [Context Link]