About

Biography

Samantha Walsh commenced her teaching career in the tertiary education sector in 2010 and has held an ongoing academic appointment at the University of the Sunshine Coast (UniSC), Fraser Coast Campus, since 2016. In her role, Samantha is responsible for developing and coordinating coursework within the Bachelor of Nursing Science program, supporting delivery across UniSC’s broader footprint from Moreton Bay to Fraser Coast. Her professional interests focus on learning and teaching in nursing, with a particular emphasis on creating resources that simulate real-world experiences and foster interprofessional collaboration. She is passionate about leveraging diverse educational systems to enhance outcomes for undergraduate students and strengthen the healthcare workforce. 

 

Samantha brings over 16 years of continuous clinical experience in emergency nursing, with a strong background in emergency care within regional Queensland. She is an active member of the College of Emergency Nursing Australasia, the Australian College of Nursing, and the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Educators Network. Prior to relocating to regional Queensland, Samantha worked as a Registered Nurse at Wollongong Hospital, the primary referral and teaching hospital for the Illawarra and Shoalhaven regions, where she gained experience across a broad range of specialty areas. 

Research

As a Higher Degree by Research candidate, Samantha is deeply engaged in her research on “Speaking Up for Patient Safety.” This thesis explores what motivates preregistration nursing students to speak up for patient safety during work-integrated learning, and examines their lived experiences using graded assertiveness to do so. Through an integrative literature review and a qualitative phenomenological study, the research identifies three key motivators, authentic learning, professional identity, and positive WIL experiences, that develops a Safety Motivation Framework grounded in Self-Determination theory. Interviews with seven students revealed four experiential themes: prioritising patient safety over self, advocacy as harm prevention, the emotional challenge of being heard, and personal reward of speaking up. Together these findings offer educators and clinicians actionable insights to foster assertive, safety-conscious practice among nursing students.

  • Samantha A. Walsh, Lisa A. Wirihana, Sandra B. Walker. 2025. "A descriptive phenomenological study of the lived experiences of preregistration nursing students who use graded assertiveness to speak up for patient safety during work-integrated learning", Nurse Education Today. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2025.106761
  • Samantha A. Walsh, Sandra B. Walker, Lisa A. Wirihana. 2024. "Preregistration nursing students' motivation for speaking up for patient safety: An integrated literature review," Nurse Education Today. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2024.106291

Previous research

Hanson, J., Walsh, S., Mason, M., Wadsworth, D., Framp, A., & Watson, K. 2020. 'Speaking up for safety': A graded assertiveness intervention for first year nursing students in preparation for clinical placement: Thematic analysis. Nurse Education Today, 84, 104252. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2019.104252

Samantha Walsh previously collaborated with Julie Martyn on a study investigating the continuing education needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioners. Their research focused on delivering personalised, locally responsive education, resulting in positive outcomes for community health and wellbeing. Samantha presented their findings at both the Australasian Nurse Education Conference and the National Nurse Education Conference, contributing to enhanced patient care across regional and rural settings.

Teaching areas

  • Patient safety
  • Transition to practice and clinical leadership.
  • Evidence-based practice
  • Professional Experience Practice – Work-integrated learning
  • Continued Professional Development
  • Preparing for practice
  • Assessments across the life span

Supervision: Samantha is not available to supervise currently.

Links

Awards and Honours

Member
Australian College of Nursing (Australia, Canberra) - ACN
Member
College of Emergency Nursing Australasia

Organisational Affiliations

Lecturer in Nursing, School of Health - Nursing

Highlights - Outputs

Journal article

by Samantha WalshLisa A Wirihana and Sandra Walker

Published 2025

Nurse Education Today, 152, 1 - 10

Journal article

by Samantha WalshSandra Walker and Lisa A Wirihana

Published 2024

Nurses Education Today, 140, 1 - 13

Education

Nursing
20022004, Bachelor of Nursing (BN), University of Wollongong (Australia, Wollongong) - UOW
Emergency Nursing
20072010, Master of Advanced Practice (MAP EmergNur), Griffith University (Gold Coast)
Teaching and Learning
20142015, Post Graduate Certificate of Tertiary Teaching and Learning (PGCTerTL), University of Southern Queensland (Australia, Toowoomba) - USQ
Teaching and Learning
20172017, Foundational University Teaching, University of the Sunshine Coast (Australia, Sunshine Coast) - UniSC
Master of Research
Oct-2020Dec-2025, Master of Research - MSc(R), Central Queensland University (Australia, Rockhampton) - CQU

Preregistration nursing students’ motivation to communicate for safety and their lived experience of using graded assertiveness to speak-up during work integrated learning; Dr Sandra Walker & Professor Lisa Wirihana