Benner, P. (1982). From Novice to Expert. The American Journal of Nursing, 82(3), 402. doi:10.2307/3462928
This article is the original article from the author that wrote it. Written in 1982, she starts it off with the salvo-like statement that says that nursing in acute-care settings is so high-stakes and chaotic that it is not possible to standardize what a nurse does, when they do it and why when such situations come to light. However, Ms. Benner has a lot to offer in the words and paragraphs to come.
Benner notes fairly early on in the article that there are five levels of proficiency, those being novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient and expert. Benner that describes the steps one by one as the article goes on. Of course, a beginner has no experience and is basically starting from nothing in terms of where they have been but they have a lot of dreams, hopefully, about where they are going. Benner notes that an advanced beginner can manifest "marginally acceptable" performance. A "competent" person has been on the job for two or three years and has learned a lot of the tips and tricks necessary to be at least basically adept at their job. What moves a person to the "proficient" stage is when they start to assess situations as whole environments rather than just individual pieces to be dealt with. Expert is when the person...
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