NURSING AND THE HEALTH
PROFESSIONS
1ST EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)JUDITH A. HALSTEAD;
DIANE M. BILLINGS
TEST BANK
1
Reference
Ch. 1 — Introduction to curriculum development
Stem
Your school is moving from teacher-centered content lists to a
competency-based curriculum. As a newly appointed
curriculum committee member, you must recommend the first
step the committee should take to ensure alignment across
courses and clinical experiences. Which action best initiates a
valid, program-level competency alignment process?
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,Options
A. Convene faculty to rewrite course objectives using Bloom’s
lower-level verbs for clarity.
B. Map program-level competencies to expected learner
outcomes and existing course/clinical experiences.
C. Replace existing syllabi with standardized course templates
without changing outcomes.
D. Ask clinical partners to submit evaluation forms to justify
current clinical hours.
Correct answer
B
Rationale — Correct (B)
Mapping program-level competencies to expected learner
outcomes and existing course and clinical experiences
systematically reveals gaps, redundancies, and misalignments.
This is the foundational curriculum-development activity that
enables downstream decisions about content, assessment, and
sequencing. Halstead & Billings emphasize alignment as the
organizing principle for competency-based redesign.
Rationales — Incorrect
A. Rewriting objectives with lower-level verbs may increase
clarity but misses program-level alignment and risks
emphasizing recall over competencies.
C. Simply standardizing syllabi without revising outcomes
preserves misalignment and masks curricular deficiencies.
D. Collecting partner evaluations is useful later for validation,
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,but it does not establish program-to-course alignment as the
initial step.
Teaching Point
Begin curriculum design with a program-to-course competency
map.
Citation
Halstead, J. A., & Billings, D. M. (2025). Getting Started in
Teaching for Nursing and the Health Professions (1st Ed.). Ch. 1.
2
Reference
Ch. 1 — Introduction to curriculum development
Stem
During a curriculum audit you identify substantial content
repetition in first- and second-year courses. As curriculum lead,
you must evaluate whether to keep, condense, or remove
duplicated content. Which evaluative approach best supports a
defensible decision?
Options
A. Remove all duplication immediately to shorten program
length.
B. Conduct a learning-outcomes analysis to determine whether
repetition supports mastery or is unnecessary redundancy.
C. Leave duplication because repetition helps retention.
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, D. Assign duplication review to junior faculty as a routine
administrative task.
Correct answer
B
Rationale — Correct (B)
A learning-outcomes analysis assesses whether repeated
content supports progressive mastery (scaffolding) or is
unnecessary redundancy. Evidence-based curriculum work uses
outcomes and level-of-practice expectations to justify retention
or removal of content. Halstead & Billings recommend
outcome-driven decisions rather than ad hoc elimination or
preservation.
Rationales — Incorrect
A. Immediate removal risks eliminating needed practice or
reinforcement without evidence.
C. Assuming repetition is beneficial ignores sequencing and
level-of-cognitive demand; some repetition is intentional, some
is wasteful.
D. Delegating to junior faculty without faculty-wide analysis
risks biased, inconsistent decisions.
Teaching Point
Use outcomes analysis to judge content repetition vs.
purposeful scaffolding.
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