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Afua Ottie Arhin

Researcher at Fayetteville State University

Publications -  8
Citations -  246

Afua Ottie Arhin is an academic researcher from Fayetteville State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nurse education & Academic dishonesty. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 229 citations. Previous affiliations of Afua Ottie Arhin include Grambling State University & Florida A&M University.

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Journal Article

A pilot study of nursing student's perceptions of academic dishonesty: a generation Y perspective.

TL;DR: A pilot study that tested an instrument that explored the perceptions of cheating in undergraduate nursing students found participants in this study were quite clear on the definition of academic dishonesty in examination situations but had difficulty identifying academic dishonest behaviors during classroom and laboratory assignments.
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A multidiscipline exploration of college students' perceptions of academic dishonesty: are nursing students different from other college students?

TL;DR: The purpose of this study was to explore the perceptions and attitudes of academic dishonesty in undergraduate students and to determine whether undergraduate nursing students' perceptions of academics dishonesty were different from undergraduate students majoring in other disciplines.
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Using deconstruction to educate Generation Y nursing students.

TL;DR: This article describes how deconstruction can be used to enhance nursing education of Generation Y students, and its application to reading comprehension and writing skills is explored.
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Encouraging alternative forms of self expression in the generation Y student: a strategy for effective learning in the classroom.

TL;DR: This paper presents an innovative teaching/learning strategy used in a nursing school in Florida that accommodates the unique characteristics of these learners.
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Factors influencing decision-making regarding contraception and pregnancy among nursing students.

TL;DR: This exploratory study used grounded theory methodology to identify and describe the decision-making processes and coping of African American nursing students who become pregnant and five interrelated themes emerged from the data.