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The Effects of Combining Electronic Picture Books With RPG-Based Gamified Learning on Nursing Students' Motivation and Learning Outcomes in Breastfeeding Education

C

China Medical University

Status

Begins enrollment in 4 months

Conditions

Nursing Education Research
Nursing Students
Breastfeeding Education

Treatments

Behavioral: Electronic picture books and Online RPG interactive adventure game
Behavioral: face-to-face teaching

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07525700
CMUH115-REC1-069

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aimed to explore the impact of electronic picture books combined with RPG on breastfeeding learning outcomes among nursing students. The study participants were third-year nursing students from a university in central Taiwan. A randomized controlled design was used, with the experimental group receiving electronic picture books combined with RPG, while the control group received traditional face-to-face instruction. Changes in students' breastfeeding knowledge, learning motivation, self-efficacy, and cognitive load were assessed. The expected results can provide a reference for innovative teaching models in nursing education and promote the future clinical application of breastfeeding.

Full description

Breastfeeding is widely considered to be the best source of nutrition for infants, helping to reduce infant morbidity and mortality, reduce the risk of infection and chronic diseases, and promote intellectual development. However, in current nursing education, how to effectively improve students' knowledge and skills of breastfeeding has yet to be developed. Common traditional face-to-face courses are limited by time and venue, which requires students to re-adapt and learn when entering the clinical internship stage, affecting learning efficiency and clinical application.

This study adopts a randomized controlled experimental design and is expected to recruit 100 third-year nursing students from a university in central Taiwan, divided into an experimental group and a control group. The experimental group studied with electronic picture books combined with RPG on breastfeeding learning, and the control group took a traditional face-to-face course. Data were collected through a structured questionnaire, and changes in breastfeeding knowledge, learning motivation, self-efficacy, and cognitive load were assessed analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. The expected results showed that the interactive e-book not only significantly improved students' learning outcomes, but also helped overcome gender restrictions, enhance learning motivation, promote future clinical promotion of breastfeeding, and serve as an important reference for innovative nursing education models.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. It is expected to include 100 people.
  2. A third-year nursing student.
  3. Studying obstetrics and gynecology nursing this semester.
  4. Agree to participate in this study and sign the research consent form.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Students who are planning to take a leave of absence at the time of data collection.
  2. Students who have not taken obstetrics and gynecology nursing this semester or have taken it in the past.
  3. Students who are unable to use 3C products.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

100 participants in 2 patient groups

face-to-face teaching
Active Comparator group
Description:
face-to-face teaching of breastfeeding
Treatment:
Behavioral: face-to-face teaching
Electronic picture books and Online RPG interactive adventure game
Experimental group
Description:
Integration of online RPG interactive adventure games with an electronic picture books learning mode for the instruction of breastfeeding.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Electronic picture books and Online RPG interactive adventure game

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Ya-Ling Tzeng; Ting-Shan Chang

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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