Creating the Assessment Culture

 

 

Educational institutions, for the most part, have multiple departments or units that are involved with research
and evaluation: Office of Instructional Effectiveness, Office of Institutional Research, Office of Assessment, and
the Institutional Review Board, to name a few. Nurse educators may be required or even choose to collaborate
with many of these departments to manage assessment and evaluation of programs. In addition, nurse
educators have a responsibility to communicate assessment results with students, faculty, students’ families,
other educators, regulatory entities, and accreditors. Planning for the various communication streams related to
reporting assessment information is crucial to the success of creating a culture of assessment for the
organization.
Research communication models and communication streams.
Develop a communication plan to socialize stakeholders with assessment information, quality improvement
plans, and to solicit feedback to support a culture of assessment in the organization: Evaluate best practices to
provide a communication report about assessment results for:
your organization and its responsible departments or units
for accreditors
for regulatory agencies (e.g., state boards of nursing)
for faculty
for students
for the public
Would you share results via social media, the organization’s web site, and/or through a written report?
Evaluate how you would plan to gather feedback about the results and solicit input for quality improvements
from all stakeholders.
Evaluate how you plan to use stakeholder feedback and input to recommend quality improvements to the
organization, accreditors, and regulatory agencies.
Incorporate a flow chart or communication model in your plan as a graphic.

 

 

Sample Solution

wnwards until reaching the target source layer and curve into a horizontal direction which runs a long distance laterally to give the wellbores extended contact with the formation. The advantage of horizontal wells is the long and constant exposure to source rocks. For example, a vertical well piercing a 30m-thick layer would only have 30m of exposure to the oil and gas interval, whereas a horizontal well would have several hundreds of exposures.

Figure. The cartoon shows the difference between conventional (right) and unconventional (left) drilling methods. The branches extended on the horizontal well are the representatives of hydraulic fracturing.

https://www.croftsystems.net/oil-gas-blog/conventional-vs.-unconventional

Hydraulic fracturing, commonly known as fracking, further extends the drainage pattern around horizontal wellbores by creating fracture patterns that facilitate flow. Fracking injects a high-pressure ‘fracking fluid’ (primarily water, sand and chemicals) into a wellbore to create cracks in the rock formations which release the oil and gas inside. (https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/publication/eur-scientific-and-technical-research-reports/overview-hydraulic-fracturing-and-other-formation-stimulation-technologies-shale-gas-0) This method is now widely used world-wild, ensuring the US and Canada to have constant gas supply for 100 years and has presented an opportunity to generate electricity at half the CO2 emissions of coal. (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-14432401)

Steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) is another method used to open up large deposits below the surface and produce heavy crude oil and bitumen. It is an advanced form of steam stimulation in which a

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