“In nursing staff caring for patients in an inpatient rehabilitation setting (P) does a nurse education session on fall prevention with the Fall TIPS Toolkit prevention bundle (I) compared to current fall
You will submit clinical logs and narratives this week.
It’s important to approach this submission thoughtfully, as these documents represent both your academic growth and clinical competency. Clinical logs will be recorded in CORE, and narratives will be submitted to week 10 project.
The purpose of these logs is to provide validation of clinical outcomes and supervision of professional development.
They also help faculty and mentors track your evolving understanding of advanced nursing practice and patient-centered care. Through consistent documentation, you build a reflective connection between theory and real-world application.
Your logs should include the following two parts:
These components work together to demonstrate both practical skill-building and reflective analysis of your progress.
Successful completion of CORE hours, with satisfactory explanation of each daily activity. Satisfactory midterm evaluation by mentor.
Keep in mind that detailing your daily activities gives insight into your professional journey and helps mentors assess your learning trajectory.
A written narrative covering the following items:
This section is the heart of your reflection, capturing the personal and intellectual growth you’ve experienced throughout your clinical practice.
Weekly reflection summary providing an overview of clinical or scholarly activities during the reporting time period (Weeks 6–10).
Take time to connect these weekly insights with your professional goals and the DNP Essentials to highlight your progress effectively.
Commentary and evidence (examples) of progress toward achieving specific course objectives.
Supporting your narrative with examples not only strengthens your reflection but also validates your achievements.
Reflections that include thoughts, feelings, and correlation to the University’s Five Pillars of Nursing (professionalism, critical thinking, holism, communication, and caring) on the overall experience and correlate to The Essentials of Doctoral Education for Advanced Nursing Practice.
Your reflection should be introspective and authentic, showing how the pillars align with your clinical and scholarly development. Sharing meaningful experiences adds depth to your professional narrative.
DNP ESSENTIALS:
I. Scientific Underpinnings for Practice
II. Organizational and Systems Leadership for Quality Improvement and Systems Thinking
III. Clinical Scholarship and Analytical Methods for Evidence-Based Practice
IV. Information Systems/Technology and Patient Care Technology for the Improvement and Transformation of Health Care
V. Health Care Policy for Advocacy in Health Care
VI. Interprofessional Collaboration for Improving Patient and Population Health Outcomes
VII. Clinical Prevention and Population Health for Improving the Nation’s Health
VIII. Advanced Nursing Practice
These essentials serve as a guiding framework for demonstrating the depth and scope of doctoral-level nursing practice. They remind you to integrate scholarship, leadership, and innovation into your clinical role.
Note: Each week, your reflection should be a 1- to 2-page summary of the week’s activities.
Your reflections should show thoughtful engagement with your clinical environment and growing autonomy as a practitioner. This should result in about 5 pages of the overall reflection summary for week 10.
Rubric:
Be specific with the activities that were included in clinical hours. This should be more detailed than what is listed in Core.
Adding vivid, specific descriptions allows reviewers to understand your active participation and critical thinking. Include specifically what was done during the clinical activity time. Include more than literature review, or worked on IRB, or patient care hours, or met with preceptor.
What did you find during the literature review, what specifically did you work on for IRB, what was discussed or completed with the preceptor, what did you do during patient care hours?
Reflecting on your findings and experiences ensures your logs show depth and engagement. Include any workshops, business or professional meetings. May include agendas or brochures if they are available.
These are some examples of how to be specific.
Detailed documentation supports accountability and aligns your work with program objectives. Your grade will be affected if you are not including specific activities, in addition to meeting the criteria listed in the grading rubric and the guidelines under week 10 project.
Provided an overview of the clinical or scholarly activities during the reporting time period (Weeks 6–10).
This helps to tie your activities to measurable outcomes and progress indicators.
Provided commentary and evidence (examples) of progress toward achieving specific course objectives and DNP Essentials.
Clear alignment between evidence and objectives demonstrates scholarly rigor.
Clearly reflected on the overall experience on the basis of each of the University’s Five Pillars of Nursing.
Your insights should connect classroom learning with clinical realities to illustrate your competence growth.
Used correct spelling, grammar, and professional vocabulary. Cited all sources using APA format. No errors. (articles must be within 5 years).
Strong communication reflects your professionalism and scholarly credibility.
Note: Basically, this is what I have been working on for the DNP project:
Your project focus highlights the critical role of evidence-based education in patient safety outcomes and interdisciplinary collaboration.
Topic:
“In nursing staff caring for patients in an inpatient rehabilitation setting (P) does a nurse education session on fall prevention with the Fall TIPS Toolkit prevention bundle (I) compared to current fall prevention protocol (C) impact the rate of falls on the unit and knowledge of staff (O) over a period of 6 weeks (T).”
Your project reflects a practical and research-driven approach that seeks to enhance clinical safety and nursing education outcomes. It exemplifies a meaningful integration of research and real-world problem solving.
Please see the hours and activities below:
Date Range: 09/08/25
Hours Submitted: 10.00
Activity Details:
Completed the combined data collection and analysis plan to guide project implementation. Finalized recruitment flyers and staff implementation equipment sheet in preparation for participant enrollment.
Adding details about the collaborative process or feedback received can provide further insight into your engagement. All materials are ready for the recruitment phase, pending final approval from Jackson Memorial Hospital.
Date Range: 09/12/25
Hours Submitted: 12.00
Your continued documentation reflects commitment and adherence to project milestones. Maintaining consistency in recording these details demonstrates professionalism and accountability.