XQassess

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ASSEESSMENT.docx

ASSEESSMENT

Part 1: Data Analysis  

Go to  county health rankings website  and explore the health outcomes and health factors data for the county where you reside. ( MY ZIP CODE 33177) Analyze the available data, compare county data to state and national benchmarks, identify potential reasons for disparity or similarities between two health outcomes.

Part 2: Health Care Initiative 

You will describe one population health care initiative that could improve health outcomes or reduce factor that affect health outcomes in a particular county. After selecting the county, you will describe one population health care initiative that could improve health outcomes or reduce factors that affect health outcomes in your county. 

Part 3: Nurse Leader 

You will answer the following prompts: Describe how

· nurse leaders use data to tie into care outcomes.

· is data used in your area of practice? 

· have you used data?    

Submission Length: Three-part assessment: A) Analyze the data from the website (1 page), B) describe one population health care initiative that could improve health outcomes or reduce factor that affect health outcomes in a particular county (1-2 pages), and C) describe how nurse leaders use data to tie into care outcomes (1-2 pages). 

XQ4003_Rubric.pdf

© 2024 Walden University 1

XQ4003: Data and Evaluating Performance: Utilize benchmark and outcome data to inform performance management and clinical decision making.

Assessment Rubric

Rubric Criteria Masters Expectations Achieves Expectations Does Not Meet

Expectations

Module 1: Data

Complete data analysis.

• Analyze the available data, compare county data to state and national benchmarks, identify potential reasons for disparity or similarities between two health outcomes.

Learning Objective 1.1: Interpret sources of data, benchmark and outcome data to inform practice Learning Objective 1.2: Determine types of measures and comprehensive measurements set

The response comprehensively and clearly analyzes the data to compare county data to state and national benchmarks, identifies potential reasons for disparity or similarities between two health outcomes. The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples that fully support the analysis.

The response analyzes the data to compare county data to state and national benchmarks, identifies potential reasons for disparity or similarities between two health outcomes. The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples that support the analysis.

The response inaccurately and vaguely analyzes the data to compare county data to state and national benchmarks, identifies potential reasons for disparity or similarities between two health outcomes. The response includes inaccurate and vague examples that do not support the analysis, or it is missing.

Select a population health care initiative for analysis.

• Describe one population health care initiative that could improve health outcomes or reduce factors that affect health

The response comprehensively and describes a population health care initiative that could improve health care outcomes in your county.

The response describes a population health care initiative that could improve health care outcomes in your county.

The response inaccurately and vaguely describes a population health care initiative that could improve health care outcomes in your county, or it is missing.

© 2024 Walden University 2

Rubric Criteria Masters Expectations Achieves Expectations Does Not Meet

Expectations

outcomes in your county.

Learning Objective 1.1: Interpret sources of data, benchmark and outcome data to inform practice Learning Objective 1.2: Determine types of measures and comprehensive measurements set

The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples that fully support the description

The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples that support the description.

The response includes inaccurate and vague examples that do not support the description, or it is missing.

Module 2: Evaluating Performance

Complete nurse leader analysis.

• Describe how nurse leaders use data to tie into care outcomes.

Learning Objective 2.1: Describe how nurse leaders use data for performance management

The response comprehensively and clearly describes how nurse leaders use data to tie into care outcomes. The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples that fully support the connection.

The response describes how nurse leaders use data to tie into care outcomes. The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples that support the connection.

The response inaccurately and vaguely describes how nurse leaders use data to tie into care outcomes, or it is missing. The response includes inaccurate and vague examples that do not support the connection, or it is missing.

• Explain how you used data.

The response comprehensively and clearly explains use of data.

The response explains the use of data. The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples

The response inaccurately and vaguely explains the use of data, or it is missing.

© 2024 Walden University 3

Rubric Criteria Masters Expectations Achieves Expectations Does Not Meet

Expectations

Learning Objective 2.1: Describe how nurse leaders use data for performance management

The response includes relevant, specific, and appropriate examples that fully support the explanation.

that fully support the explanation.

The response includes inaccurate and vague examples that do not support the explanation, or it is missing.

Professional Writing Skills Assessment

Professional Writing Masters Expectations Achieves Expectations Does not Meet

Expectations

Context, Organization, Audience, Purpose, Tone, Style, Clarity, Flow

Demonstrates full awareness of writing context, audience, and purpose. Content is consistently clear, logical, and well organized with appropriate sentence and paragraph structure. Tone is highly professional, scholarly, and free of bias. Style is consistently appropriate for a

Demonstrates some awareness of writing context, audience, and purpose. Content is mostly clear, logical, and well organized with adequate sentence and paragraph structure. Tone is adequately professional, scholarly, and/or free of bias. Style is mostly appropriate for a professional setting/workplace context.

Demonstrates minimal awareness of writing context, audience, and purpose. Content lacks clarity, logic, and/or discernible organization and does not use proper sentence and paragraph structure. Tone is not professional/scholarly and/or contains bias. Style is inconsistent with a professional setting/workplace context.

© 2024 Walden University 4

Professional Writing Masters Expectations Achieves Expectations Does not Meet

Expectations

professional setting/workplace context. Free of spelling, punctuation, and grammar/syntax errors.

Contains few spelling, punctuation, and/or grammar/syntax errors.

Content contains significant spelling, punctuation, and/or grammar/syntax errors.

Originality, Source Credibility, and Attribution of Ideas

Writing fully reflects original thought and paraphrasing and adheres to reference requirements, including the use of credible evidence to support a claim while incorporating appropriate citations and references in APA format.

Writing adequately reflects original thought and paraphrasing and adheres to reference requirements, including the use of credible evidence to support a claim while incorporating appropriate citations and references in APA format.

Writing does not reflect original thought and paraphrasing and does not adhere to reference requirements, including the use of credible evidence to support a claim while incorporating appropriate citations and references in APA format.

XQ4003_CON_Writing_Template.docx

5

Title of the Paper in Full Goes Here

Student Name Here

Program Name or Degree Name, Walden University

Course Number, Section, and Title

(Example: NURS 0000 Section 01, Title of Course)

Instructor Name

Month, Day, Year

(enter the date submitted to instructor)

Title of the Paper

This is your introductory paragraph designed to inform the reader of what you will cover in the paper. ( BSN Students - Carefully follow your course-specific Grading Rubric concerning the content that is required for your assignment and the Academic Writing Expectations [AWE] level of your course.) This template’s formatting—Times New Roman 12-point font (other options include Calibri 11, Arial 11, Lucida Sans Unicode 10, and Georgia 11), double spacing, 1” margins, 1/2” indentations beginning of each paragraph, page numbers, and page breaks—is set for you, and you do not need to change it. Do not add any extra spaces between the heading and the text (you may want to check Spacing under Paragraph, and make sure settings are all set to “0”). The ideas in this paper should be in your own words and supported by credible outside evidence. Cite the author, year of publication, and page number, if necessary, per APA. The introductory paragraph should receive no specific heading because the first section functions as your paper’s introduction. Build this paragraph with the following elements:

1. Briefly detail what has been said or done regarding the topic.

2. Explain the problem with what has been said or done.

3. Create a purpose statement (also commonly referred to as a thesis statement) as the last sentence of this paragraph: “The purpose of this paper is to describe…”.

Level 1 Heading (Name According to the Grading Rubric Required Content)

This text will be the beginning of the body of the paper. Even though this section has a new heading, make sure to connect this section to the previous one so the reader can follow along with the ideas and research presented. The first sentence, or topic sentence, in each paragraph should transition from the previous paragraph and summarize the main point in the paragraph. Make sure each paragraph addresses only one topic. When you see yourself drifting to another idea, make sure you break into a new paragraph. Avoid long paragraphs that are more than three-fourths of a page. Per our program recommendations, each paragraph should be at least 3-4 sentences in length and contain a topic sentence, evidence, analysis, and a conclusion or lead out sentence. See the MEAL plan (Main idea, Evidence, Analysis, and Lead out) in the Writing Center. In your paragraphs, synthesize your resources/readings into your own words and avoid using direct quotations. In the rare instances you do use a direct quotation of a historical nature from a source, the page or paragraph numbers are also included in the citation. For example, Leplante and Nolin (2014) described burnout as "a negative affective response occurring as result of chronic work stress" (p. 2). When you transition to a new idea, you should begin a new paragraph.

Another Level 1 Heading (Name According to the Grading Rubric Required Content)

Here is another Level 1 heading. Again, the topic sentence of this section should explain how this paragraph is related to or a result of what you discussed in the previous section. Consider using transitions between sentences to help readers see the connections between ideas.

Be sure to credit your source(s) in your paper using APA style. The APA Manual 7th edition and the Walden Writing Center are your best citation resources. Writing Center resources are available at https://academicguides.waldenu.edu/writingcenter/apa/citations. You must appropriately and correctly cite all works used in your document.

The following paragraph provides examples of in-text citation examples. According to Leplante (2019), employers cause burnout when employees are stressed by too much work. Or you might write and cite in this manner: Employers cause burnout when employees are stressed by too much work (Leplante, 2019). When paraphrasing, the author name and year of publication in citations is required by APA to direct the reader to a specific source in the reference list. Personal communications are not listed in the reference page but are noted in text as (S. Wall, personal communication, May 24, 2019). This should immediately follow the content of the interview. Also, go to

Another Level 1 Heading (Name According to the Grading Rubric Required Content)

APA can seem difficult to master, but following the general rules becomes easier with use. The Writing Center also offers numerous APA resources on its website and can answer your questions via email. Prior to submitting your paper for grading, submit your draft to SafeAssign Drafts found in the left column of your course.

And so forth until the conclusion….

Conclusion

The conclusion section should recap the major points of your paper. Do not introduce new ideas in this paragraph; the conclusion should interpret what you have written and what it means in the bigger picture.

References

Please note that the following references are intended as examples only. List your own references in alphabetical order. Also, these illustrate different types of references; you are responsible for any citations not included in this list. In your paper, be sure every reference entry matches a citation, and every citation refers to an item in the reference list.

Journal Article; Two Authors; DOI

Leplante, J. P. & Nolin, C. (2014). Consultas and socially responsible investing in Guatemala: A case study examining Maya perspectives on the Indigenous right to free, prior, and informed consent. Society & Natural Resources, 27(4), 231–248. https://doi.org/10.1080/08941920.2013.861554  

Journal Article, Two Authors; URL

Eaton, T. V., & Akers, M. D. (20007). Whistleblowing and good governance. CPA Journal, 77(6), 66–71. http://archives.cpajournal.com/2007/607/essentials/p58.htm

Journal Article, More Than Twenty Authors; DOI

Wiskunde, B., Arslan, M., Fischer, P., Nowak, L., Van den Berg, O., Coetzee, L., Juárez, U., Riyaziyyat, E., Wang, C., Zhang, I., Li, P., Yang, R., Kumar, B., Xu, A., Martinez, R., McIntosh, V., Ibáñez, L. M., Mäkinen, G., Virtanen, E., . . . Kovács, A. (2019). Indie pop rocks mathematics: Twenty One Pilots, Nicolas Bourbaki, and the empty set.  Journal of Improbable Mathematics27(1), 1935–1968. https://doi.org/xxx/xxxxxx

Book; One Author

Weinstein, J. A. (2019). Social change (3rd ed.). Rowman & Littlefield.

Book; Chapter in an Edited Book

Christensen, L. (2020). For my people: Celebrating community through poetry. In B. Bigelow, B. Harvey, S. Karp, & L. Miller (Eds.), Rethinking our classrooms: Teaching for equity and justice (Vol. 2; pp. 16–17). Rethinking Schools.

Professional Organization Web page

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2018). Back to school. https://www.cdc.gov/features/teens-back-to-school/index.html

Professional Organization Book

American Nurses Association. (2010). Nursing: Scope and standards of practice (2nd ed.).

Two or more works by same author in the same year

Wall, S. (2018a). Effects of friendship on children’s behavior. Journal of Social Psychology, 4(1), 101–105.

Wall, S. (2018b). Trials of parenting adolescents with deviant behaviors. Journal of Child Psychology, 4(12), 161–167.

Government Article

National Institute of Mental Health. (1990). Clinical training in serious mental illness (DHHS Publication No. ADM 90-1679). U.S. Government Printing Office.

Lecture Notes

Health effects of exposure to forest fires [Lecture notes]. (2019). Walden University Blackboard. https://class.waldenu.edu

Personal Communication (Only Goes in Body of Paper and not in References)

Video

Walden University. (2009). Title of video here [Video]. Walden University Blackboard. https://class.waldenu.edu

Television (Audio)

Important, I. M. (Producer). (1990, November 1). The nightly news hour [TV series episode]. Central Broadcasting Service.

APA Resources

You have other several options to assist you in the formulation of your reference page.

· Your American Psychological Association (APA) Manual is your best reference resource. Use the current edition with a copyright date of 2020.

· The Walden Writing Center also a great place for referencing advice at https://academicguides.waldenu.edu/writingcenter/apa/references .

· Citation and reference examples are provided in the ‘BSN TOP Ten References and Citations” handout found in the Writing Resources tab of the course. This document covers the 10 most commonly used reference and citation formats. You are responsible for looking up any that are not included on this list.