Jane Paige, RN, Ph.D.

Professor, Program Director

  • Milwaukee WI UNITED STATES
  • Cudahy Campus Center: CC117
  • School of Nursing

Dr. Jane Paige is an expert in educational simulations and interprofessional education.

Contact

Education, Licensure and Certification

RN

Wisconsin

2022

Certified Nurse Educator

Certification

2021

Certified Healthcare Simulation Educator

Certification

2026

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Biography

Dr. Jane Paige is a professor and director of the B.S. in Nursing and Accelerated Second-Degree BSN programs at Milwaukee School of Engineering. She has done extensive research on using clinical simulation for nursing education and interprofessional education, which encourages co-learning between nursing and medical students.

Research Gate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jane_Paige

Areas of Expertise

Interprofessional Education
Nursing Education
Simulation as a Teaching Methodology

Accomplishments

Harriet Werley Research Award

2012

Karl O. Werwath Engineering Research Award

2015

Chancellors Graduate Award: University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee [for current enrollment in Ph. D. program] Academic Year

2008-09, 2007-08, 2006-07

Affiliations

  • National League of Nursing (NLN) : Member
  • American Association of Critical Care Nurses (AACN) : Member
  • MSOE School of Nursing Honor Society : Member
  • Sigma Theta Tau - International Eta NU : Member
  • Society for Simulation in Healthcare : Member
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Social

Media Appearances

Dr. Jane Paige

MSOE News  

2019-02-04

Since earning her Ph.D., Paige continues to present and publish on educational simulations. “An ongoing project for me is creating modules for educating people across the country on how to use simulations and how to develop faculty to use simulations,” she said.

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Nursing programs turn away students despite shortage

TMJ4  

2017-07-25

Dr. Jane Paige uses her nursing skills mostly on mannequins. But, since she became a nursing instructor she said her view on a patient has changed.

"Our students become our patients," Paige said. She hopes more experienced nurses will embrace that perspective.

"There's a lot of people interested in nursing and sometimes they're turned away from programs because we can't accommodate that number," explained Paige.

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Event and Speaking Appearances

Medical and nursing students interprofessional education (IPE): Perception before IPE and readiness for interprofessional practice following IPE

Building Bridges to Research Based Nursing Practice Conference  Milwaukee, WI, May 11 2018

Focusing your energies: Targeting your faculty training needs in simulation practices

Wisconsin League for Nursing and Illinois League Spring Banquet  Gateway Technical College, Kenosha, WI, April 25 2018

Operationalizing the revised INACSL Standards of Best Practice: Simulation

Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing (CASN)  Webinar, Oct 26 2017

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Research Interests

Fostering Early Interprofessional Collaboration Between Medical Students and Nursing Students

Investigating assumptions held by nursing and medical students on each other's discipline.

Faculty Development: Creating a Training Program for Simulation Educators

Investigating the impact of workshop to develop simulation educators

Selected Publications

Formal training efforts to develop simulation educators: An integrative review.

Simulation in Healthcare

Paige, J., Graham, L., and Sittner, B.

2020

Summary Statement from source: Formal training for educators who use simulation-based education (SBE) is required by standards of best practice, simulation guidelines, regulatory, and accrediting bodies. Training efforts to establish educator competency for SBE are being offered. However, a systematic review of this body of literature has yet to be conducted. The purpose of this integrative review was to appraise formal training efforts of educators who use SBE. The aims were to summarize the training topics, describe the structure of training programs, and explore evaluation methods of educators. The New World Kirkpatrick Model guided the review. A PRISMA search approach yielded 2007 citations of which 38 met inclusion criteria. Analysis supports a formalized training process that uses a combination of didactic material, time for repetitive practice, and ongoing feedback with longitudinal and scaffolded delivery approaches. An identified gap in the literature is threshold levels for determining competency of educators. Recommendations for planning simulation training programs are provided.

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Hear ye, Hear ye! Learn all About the 2016 Edition of the INACSL Standards of Best Practice: SimulationSM

INACSL Conference 2017

Paige, J.B., Sittner, B., Thomson, W., Graham, L., Aebersold, M., Leighton, K.

2017

The International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation & Learning (INACSL) takes the lead in developing, revising, and publishing the INACSL Standards of Best Practice: SimulationSM used internationally and across disciplines to train healthcare providers. Considering internal and external review, evidence-based educational practices and research, the INACSL Standards of Best Practice: Simulation undergo a cyclical and ongoing review process. In 2016, the third iteration of Standards of Best Practice: Simulation was published. With the maturing of use of simulation as a pedagogical method, those in the simulation community are charged with the utilization of the INACSL Standards of Best Practice: Simulation for designing, conducting, and evaluating simulation-based experiences. In this presentation, members of the INACSL Standards Committee (2014-2016) will update the simulation community of the 2016 edition of the INACSL Standards of Best Practice: Simulation. Detailed are the updates and revisions made that reduce redundancies, clarify language, address gaps, and incorporate new knowledge. Evident by the frequent citation of the INACSL Standards of Best Practice: Simulation in the literature, it is important the simulation community be appraised of and incorporate the most current best practices as they update and advance their simulation practices.

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More work needed! Analysis of fuzzy concepts in simulation-based learning

Journal of Nursing Education

Paige, J.B.

2016

When attending conferences or while conducting simulations, how many times have educators heard comments such as, “Simulation is a safe learning environment,” “What happens in sim stays in sim,” or “Cue the student.” Each comment reflects an aspect or phase in simulation-based learning. That said, how educators interpret these statements varies. For example, when considering the concept of a safe learning environment, one could ask for whom is it safe—the student, the patient, or both? If one educator believes that “safe” pertains to preserving the student's psychological safety, what actions does he or she take while conducting the simulation or the approach used in the debriefing session? Would the educator's concern about not harming the student's psychological safety supersede probing about errors in judgment? Conversely, if an educator believes “safe” pertains to not harming a real person, would he or she allow the student to make the error and then address it in the debrief? How many educators have pondered whether to let students make potentially life-threatening decisions or stop the simulation to correct the error in process? Does the educator's interpretation of what comprises a safe learning environment influence the choice to stop or continue with the simulation?

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