Professional Identity Q&A | Already Rated A | Rasmussen |
Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
SECTION 1: PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY & ROLE DEVELOPMENT
Q1: A newly licensed RN is struggling to transition from student to professional nurse,
experiencing anxiety and feeling overwhelmed by clinical demands. According to
Benner's stages, which stage best describes this nurse's current level of practice?
A. Advanced beginner
B. Competent
C. Novice [CORRECT]
D. Proficient
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Benner's Novice stage is characterized by no experiential background,
reliance on rules and protocols, and limited clinical judgment. New graduates enter
practice at the novice or advanced beginner level depending on prior experience, but the
description of overwhelming anxiety and rule-bound behavior aligns with novice.
Advanced beginners have marginally acceptable performance; competent nurses have
2-3 years of experience.
Q2: A nurse leader is developing a professional identity program emphasizing the five
core professional nursing values. Which value is demonstrated when a nurse advocates
for equitable resource distribution in underserved communities?
A. Autonomy
B. Altruism
C. Social justice [CORRECT]
D. Human dignity
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Social justice is the professional value that guides nurses to act with fairness
and equity, ensuring vulnerable populations receive appropriate resources and care.
Autonomy refers to self-determination, altruism to selfless concern for others, and
,human dignity to respecting inherent worth. Advocacy for equitable distribution
specifically reflects social justice.
Q3: During orientation, a nurse preceptor observes a new graduate relying heavily on
textbooks and policies rather than clinical judgment. The preceptor recognizes this as
which phase of professional socialization?
A. Informal socialization
B. Personal socialization
C. Anticipatory socialization
D. Formal socialization [CORRECT]
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Formal socialization occurs during structured educational and orientation
experiences where the novice relies on explicit rules, policies, and protocols to guide
practice. Anticipatory socialization occurs before entering the profession (e.g., nursing
school). Informal socialization occurs through peer interactions, and personal
socialization involves internalizing professional identity.
Q4: A nurse manager notices a staff nurse becoming overly involved in a patient's family
conflicts, attending family events, and accepting expensive gifts. Which professional
boundary concept is being violated?
A. Therapeutic use of self
B. Dual relationship [CORRECT]
C. Professional advocacy
D. Patient-centered partnership
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A dual relationship occurs when a nurse assumes a second role (friend,
social companion) with a patient or family, blurring professional boundaries and
compromising objectivity. Therapeutic use of self maintains professional distance while
demonstrating empathy. Accepting gifts and attending social events signals boundary
erosion.
Q5: According to the ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses (2025), which provision
emphasizes the nurse's duty to promote health and safety while maintaining individual
competence?
A. Provision 1: Respect for human dignity
,B. Provision 3: Protection of patient health and safety
C. Provision 5: Duties to self and professional growth [CORRECT]
D. Provision 9: Articulation and advancement of nursing values
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Provision 5 addresses the nurse's responsibility to preserve integrity, maintain
competence, and continue personal and professional growth to ensure quality care.
Provision 1 focuses on respect, Provision 3 on protection, and Provision 9 on the
profession's social contract. Competence maintenance falls under self-duties.
Q6: A nurse is creating a personal leadership development plan. Which component is
essential for measuring progress and ensuring accountability?
A. A detailed curriculum vitae
B. Specific, measurable goals with defined timelines and evaluation metrics [CORRECT]
C. A list of potential mentors
D. Comparison with colleagues' achievements
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Effective leadership development plans require SMART goals (Specific,
Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) with clear evaluation metrics to track
progress. A CV documents history but does not guide development. Mentors support
growth but are not measurement tools. Comparing with colleagues is counterproductive
to individual development.
Q7: A charge nurse demonstrates high emotional intelligence by recognizing her own
frustration during a code blue and consciously pausing before responding to the team.
This reflects which component of Goleman's emotional intelligence model?
A. Empathy
B. Self-regulation [CORRECT]
C. Social skills
D. Motivation
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Self-regulation involves managing disruptive emotions and impulses,
maintaining composure under stress, and thinking before acting. The nurse's conscious
pause to manage frustration exemplifies self-regulation. Empathy involves
, understanding others' emotions, social skills involve relationship management, and
motivation refers to internal drive.
Q8: A nurse executive is designing a succession planning program. Which strategy best
ensures a pipeline of future nurse leaders?
A. Hiring external candidates for all leadership positions
B. Identifying high-potential staff and providing mentorship, education, and progressive
leadership experiences [CORRECT]
C. Waiting for natural turnover to identify leadership needs
D. Rotating all staff through management positions
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Succession planning requires proactive identification of high-potential
nurses, structured mentorship, leadership development programs, and progressive
responsibility to prepare internal candidates. External hiring alone does not build
organizational capacity. Passive waiting for turnover creates gaps, and rotating all staff
is inefficient and impractical.
Q9: A nurse is reflecting on a medication error she made, journaling about the
experience, discussing it with a peer, and identifying strategies to prevent recurrence.
This is an example of:
A. Quality assurance reporting
B. Reflective practice [CORRECT]
C. Performance improvement mandate
D. Regulatory compliance
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Reflective practice involves deliberate self-examination of experiences to
gain insight, improve practice, and transform learning into action. Journaling and peer
feedback are core reflective practice strategies. While the error may trigger quality
processes, the nurse's personal introspection and learning orientation define reflective
practice.
Q10: A new graduate nurse experiences transition shock characterized by reality shock,
emotional exhaustion, and intent to leave within the first 6 months. Which intervention is
most effective to mitigate transition shock?
A. Increasing patient assignments to build resilience