Nursing Simulation Learning Objectives
Write objectives you can see, hear, and debrief
Updated July 13, 2026
Nursing simulation learning objectives should describe observable learner behavior, the conditions under which it happens, and the evidence a facilitator will use to judge completion. Start with the behavior, choose one visible verb, separate the objective from its cues, and plan the evidence before writing the scenario.
Standards context: the International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning (INACSL) states that simulation-based experiences originate with measurable objectives designed for expected behaviors and outcomes. Use the current Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice and INACSL Simfographics with your program's curriculum and evaluation policies.
Start with the behavior you need to observe
Begin with the learner action that would make the session worth running. “Understand,” “know,” and “appreciate” may describe an educational aim, but they do not tell a facilitator what to watch or a learner what performance can be discussed later. The failure mode is a scenario that feels busy while producing no shared evidence of the intended learning.
A practical drafting frame: Given [the scenario context and available resources], the learner will [observable action], evidenced by [what the facilitator can see, hear, or review]. Add a time or endpoint only when it is meaningful to the objective and supported by the case design.
Put one observable verb and one evidence rule in each objective
Use a verb that produces something a facilitator can identify: prioritize, communicate, verify, perform, document, compare, or reflect. Then name the evidence without prescribing every move. That keeps the objective measurable while leaving room for learner judgment.
| Broad draft | More observable direction | Possible evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Understand a changing situation | Identify the relevant change and state a prioritized next action | Verbalized interpretation and chosen action |
| Demonstrate teamwork | Assign roles and confirm a critical message using a closed loop | Named roles and an acknowledged message |
| Know the documentation process | Record the required simulated actions before the case closes | Completed entry in the designated simulation record |
These are drafting patterns, not universal competency statements. Adapt the content, level, and evidence to your learners, curriculum, scope, and facility process.
Separate the objective from the cue that reveals it
An objective describes what learners will demonstrate. A cue is information the simulation releases to make that demonstration possible. Mixing them creates over-cueing: the facilitator announces both the problem and the action, then records the prompted response as independent performance.
- Write the objective in the scenario design document.
- List the information learners receive at the start.
- List later cues separately, with the condition that releases each one.
- Decide what help changes the evidence from independent to prompted.
- Carry that distinction into evaluation and debriefing notes.
Plan the evidence before you build the scenario
For every objective, decide who observes it, where the evidence appears, and how uncertainty will be handled. If the only observer is also running technology, voicing the patient, and managing the room, the evidence plan is too fragile. Simplify the objective set, share the observation work, or capture a neutral event record that the team can review.
| Evidence question | Design decision |
|---|---|
| What counts? | Define the visible action, statement, artifact, or sequence. |
| Who sees it? | Assign the observer before the session begins. |
| Where is it captured? | Choose a checklist, event note, or other program-approved record. |
| What if it is unclear? | Use debrief questions to explore reasoning; do not convert an assumption into a fact. |
| How will it be discussed? | Draft one debrief prompt tied directly to the objective. |
Where VitalSim Monitor fits
VitalSim Monitor’s scenario brief presents objectives with the simulated case context, while the Monitor displays the simulation state and the instructor debrief returns to the scenario and its objectives afterward. That keeps objectives close to facilitation and debrief without making the app the evaluator. Objective quality, performance judgment, and any formal evaluation remain the educator’s responsibility.
Frequently asked questions
How many learning objectives should a nursing simulation have?
Use the smallest set the team can observe, support, and debrief with the available time and resources. If facilitators cannot name the evidence for every objective, the list is too broad for the current design.
Should simulation learning objectives be shown to learners?
Share objectives at the level required by the program and the purpose of the activity. The wording can identify the behavior domain without revealing the scenario event or response path that learners are expected to work through.
Can one simulation objective include several behaviors?
Combine behaviors only when their sequence is the skill being observed and one evidence rule can fairly capture it. If the actions require different evidence or feedback, separate them so a missed element does not disappear inside a broad statement.
Designing observable objectives for a monitor-based simulation?
Discuss an educator pilotVitalSim Monitor is in pre-launch development. Pilot conversations are for educators evaluating simulation workflows.