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  1. KEEP
  2. Faculty and Staff
  3. Pardon, Kevin
  4. Developing a Digital Collection of Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Student Work
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Developing a Digital Collection of Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Student Work

Full metadata

Title
Developing a Digital Collection of Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Student Work
Description

Objectives: While PhD dissertations are typically accessible as part of a university library’s general collection, or as content within a proprietary database, many other terminal degree projects remain invisible and inaccessible to a greater audience. This poster will describe the development and creation of a digital repository collection containing doctor of nursing practice (DNP) student’s final projects.

Methods: The “Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Final Projects Collection” was created over the course of one semester and included initial discussions with program faculty and administrators, the creation of a student consent form, the development of a process for adding student work to the repository collection, and a presentation to graduating students. This poster will describe the process in more detail, discuss benefits and challenges, as well as highlight the considerations to keep in mind when developing and creating a digital collection of student work. Additionally, best practices and lessons learned will also be described to provide valuable information to others considering creating this type of collection at their own institution.

Results: At the end of the first semester of implementation, twenty student projects existed in our public collection. On the whole, both faculty and students were pleased to have a collection highlighting the work being done in their program. Valuable lessons were learned that can be applied in the next semester of implementation. Specifically, metadata consistency was an issue during the initial uploading process. Gaining select faculty and student buy-in by allaying concerns related to some student’s wanting to publish in a peer-reviewed journal on the topic of their final project remains vital.

Conclusion: Creating open access collections of student applied final projects or capstone projects allows for greater visibility of this type of often overlooked student scholarship. Specifically, the final projects showcased can now be found and accessed by potential employers, researchers, other schools, and other DNP students. In many cases these final projects have applied real-world impact related to answering clinical questions or patient care that should be shared with the world.

Date Created
2017-05-30
Contributors
  • Pardon, Kevin (Author)
Topical Subject
  • Digital libraries
  • Dissertations, Academic
  • Academic libraries--Collection development
Resource Type
Text
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Reuse Permissions
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
Primary Member of
Pardon, Kevin
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
Yes
Series
MLA Annual Meeting 2017
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.43346
Level of coding
intermediate
Cataloging Standards
asu1
Collaborating institutions
ASU Library
System Created
  • 2017-04-26 01:14:27
System Modified
  • 2025-09-16 11:34:45
  •     
  • 9 months 1 week ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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Copyright Statement
  • In Copyright
  • Reuse Permissions
  • Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
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