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AI-Powered Interview Simulation to Improve Employability and Reduce Anxiety in Nursing and Midwifery Students (CARESIM)

K

Koç University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Simulation Training
Employment Anxiety
Midwifery Education
Educational Technology
Nursing Education Research
Perceived Employability
Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Treatments

Other: AI-Based Interview Simulation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07061132
2025.203.IRB3.080 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This randomized controlled trial aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a ChatGPT-based job interview simulation on the employment perceptions and interview-related anxiety of senior nursing and midwifery students. Transitioning from education to professional practice in healthcare is a critical phase that directly influences employability and career readiness. Particularly for nursing and midwifery students, the ability to navigate job interviews with confidence plays a pivotal role in shaping their future career paths. As such, innovative and digital interventions are needed to better prepare students for this process.

Grounded in Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory and the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), the study explores how AI-driven simulations affect students' self-efficacy, perceived utility, and usability, and ultimately their career-related outlook. The intervention involves a structured, text-based job interview simulation powered by ChatGPT-4o, during which students respond to a series of nine professionally tailored questions. These questions are aligned with international competency frameworks such as those from ICN (2008) and ICM (2024), focusing on themes like professionalism, teamwork, evidence-based care, communication, and leadership. At the end of the simulation, the chatbot provides brief, constructive feedback to the participant.

A total of 102 final-year students from Koç University and Istanbul University-Cerrahpaşa will be recruited using stratified randomization. Participants will be assigned to either an intervention group, which will complete the ChatGPT simulation, or a control group, which will not receive any interview intervention but will complete the same pre- and post-test questionnaires. Key outcome measures include the Perceived Future Employability Scale (PFE), the Interview Anxiety Scale (MASI-T), and a simulation experience form for the intervention group. Quantitative data will be analyzed using SPSS with appropriate parametric and non-parametric tests based on data distribution, and an intention-to-treat (ITT) approach will be adopted.

To ensure the integrity of the experiment, blinding procedures, strict confidentiality, and group separation protocols will be applied. The simulation will be conducted individually on research-owned devices in private rooms, and no personal or textual data will be saved from the AI interactions. Ethical approval has been obtained from Koç University Social and Behavioral Ethics Committee. Participation is voluntary, informed consent will be collected, and all processes will comply with the Helsinki Declaration and Turkish Personal Data Protection Law.

Ultimately, this study seeks to offer evidence on the pedagogical utility of AI-based simulation tools in preparing healthcare students for employment, while also contributing to the broader field of digital transformation in health education.

Full description

This study introduces an innovative AI-based intervention aimed at enhancing employability preparation among senior nursing and midwifery students through a simulated job interview experience. The intervention is structured around a generative artificial intelligence model (ChatGPT-4o), which delivers a dynamic, text-based interaction mimicking realistic interview settings. The chatbot prompts are informed by international professional competency frameworks and were developed with input from nursing educators, digital learning experts, and HR professionals.

The conceptual basis of the study combines Social Cognitive Theory and the Technology Acceptance Model, allowing exploration of how simulated, interactive environments contribute to professional readiness. In particular, the study investigates the influence of self-efficacy beliefs and user perception of AI technology on employment-related attitudes.

To ensure validity and usability, a pilot implementation was conducted prior to full deployment. This included iterative testing of the chatbot dialogue flow, question clarity, and interview timing, with input from students outside the main sample. Minor refinements were applied to optimize realism and reduce cognitive overload during simulation.

The AI interaction does not involve natural language learning or data retention; its sole function is to facilitate reflective engagement in a structured scenario. All responses are deleted after the session to comply with data protection standards. The chatbot-generated feedback is non-evaluative and designed to reinforce confidence.

Quantitative analysis will be supplemented with descriptive insights from a post-simulation feedback form that captures students' subjective experience, perceived preparedness, and usability impressions. This mixed-methods integration supports a comprehensive understanding of the intervention's practical and pedagogical value.

Ultimately, the project aims to contribute to the responsible implementation of AI tools in health professions education, particularly in the context of employability, professional identity formation, and digital literacy.

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Must be 18 years of age or older

Must be a senior-year student enrolled in a nursing or midwifery program

Must voluntarily agree to participate in the study

Must provide written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

Unable to participate in the intervention or assessments due to extended absence or medical leave

Fails to complete either the pre-test or post-test assessments

Previous participation in the pilot phase of the study

Prior exposure to the ChatGPT-based interview simulation used in this study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

90 participants in 2 patient groups

AI-Based Interview Simulation Group
Experimental group
Description:
Arm Description: Participants in this arm will complete a structured, AI-powered job interview simulation using ChatGPT-4o. The simulation will consist of nine competency-based questions aligned with international nursing and midwifery standards. The interaction will be conducted individually in written format, and the chatbot will provide short, supportive feedback at the end. No text data will be saved. This simulation is designed to enhance participants' employability perception and reduce their interview-related anxiety.
Treatment:
Other: AI-Based Interview Simulation
No-Intervention Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Participants in this arm will not receive any intervention during the study period. They will complete the same pre-test and post-test assessments as the intervention group but will not participate in the AI-powered interview simulation. After the study concludes, they may optionally be offered access to the simulation for educational purposes, but no data will be collected from that session.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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