How to Use the Stroke Core Competency Frameworks
- Rate yourself on your level of expertise using Benner’s Stages of Clinical Competence
- Identify areas for improvement and develop professional learning plans. CLICK HERE for an optional learning plan template.
- Seek professional development opportunities to fulfill professional learning plans.
- Leadership may use learning plans to support professional development reviews.
- Leadership may collate results to inform organizational priorities for stroke care that can be integrated into their strategic plan.
**Steps 4 and 5 requires organizational support and collaboration
Benner’s Stages of Clinical Competence
Introduction:
Healthcare is complex and there is a level of responsibility for ongoing professional development and learning among those working in stroke care.
The Stroke Core Competency Framework is a self-directed resource and can be used to help identify individual learning needs. It utilizes Benner’s Stages of Clinical Competence as the approach to assessment.
Benner’s Stages of Clinical Competence were derived from the Dreyfus Model of Skill Acquisition (Novice to Expert). Benner’s theory proposes expertise and understanding in healthcare over time and is based on educational background/knowledge as well as experience/situation-based learning (Benner, 1982).
As described in Benner’s model, “experience is not the mere passage of time or longevity; it is the refinement of preconceived notions and theory by encountering many actual practical situations that add nuances or shades of differences to theory. Theory offers what can be made explicit and formalized but clinical practice is always more complex and presents many more realities that can be captured by theory alone. Theory, however, guides clinicians and enables them to ask the right questions. Theory and research are generated from the practical world, from the practices of experts in a field” (Benner, 1982 p. 6).
How to use Benner’s Stages of Clinical Competence:
The table below will help you use Benner’s Stages of Clinical Competence to self-evaluate your level of competence. The goal is not to become an expert in all areas of stroke care, but to identify learning needs based on your current environment, knowledge, skill, experience, and scope of practice.
Note: Years of experience are guidelines based on Benner’s research in building nursing expertise. These stages have since been incorporated by various healthcare providers.
Stage | Knowledge, Skill, and Experience |
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Stage 1: Novice |
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Stage 2: Advance Beginner |
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Stage 3: Competent |
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Stage 4: Proficient |
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Stage 5: Expert |
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Reference:
Benner, P. (1982). From novice to expert. American Journal of Nursing, 82(3), 402-407
Benner, P. (1984). From Novice to expert: Excellence and power in clinical nursing practice. Menlo Park: Addison-Wesley, pp. 13-34