Group mentoring: a story of transition for undergraduate baccalaureate nursing students.
Background: Group mentoring has been endorsed as an effective method of supporting novice professionals across disciplines. In one university, faculty revised the undergraduate nursing curriculum to include a group mentoring course as a requirement of students during the four semesters they are enrolled in the nursing program.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to explore the lived experience of undergraduate nursing students participating in a group mentoring course.
Methods: This study used a hermeneutic interpretive phenomenological method. Methods: Data were collected from 22 undergraduate nursing students enrolled in group mentoring courses at a private Midwestern university in the United States. Methods: At the end of each semester of mentoring, students provided written responses to five open-ended questions about their experiences of participating in the mentoring courses.
Results: Four themes emerged: conversation, communication, connection, and cohesion.
Conclusions: Group mentoring was an effective way to support nursing students as they transitioned from undergraduate student to novice professional nurse.