A new and original methodology for nursing education developed at Western New Mexico University (WNMU) is poised to change how student competency is measured and improved. Lorenzo Saenz is the Nursing Lab Simulation Coordinator at WNMU School of Nursing and Kinesiology. Saenz presented his innovative framework at the Gulf Coast Healthcare Simulation Conference in Mobile, Alabama, on October 3, 2025.
Saenz鈥檚 presentation detailed a new approach that uses Performance Reference Points (PRP) to objectively track a nursing student’s skill level through longitudinal data. This system moves beyond traditional pedagogy, where a student learns a skill, tests on it, and may not use it again for months. The PRP framework allows educators to assess whether a student is in one of three states of competence: progression, stagnation, or degradation. By understanding where each student is, instructors can tailor simulations to shore up weaknesses or introduce new challenges, ensuring continuous readiness.
鈥淭raditional education models don鈥檛 allow us a consistent way to determine a student鈥檚 true level of competence over time,鈥 Saenz explained. Research shows that without practice learned skills can degrade in as little as six weeks. The methodology Saenz designed keeps students from sliding into that degradation, ensuring they are always ready for a clinical setting.
鈥淲e want simulations that have a rigor appropriate to the student鈥檚 level,鈥 Saenz noted. The new methodology allows WNMU instructors to truly assess individualized student competency: when to do something, how to do it safely, why it works, and how to verify its efficacy. 鈥淲e must teach and assess students in the same environment they will be working in,鈥 he stated. 鈥淎t 糖心视频, we have operationalized stress and can scaffold the difficulty of each simulation in an objective manner.鈥
With some of the most sophisticated simulation robots available, WNMU provides the perfect laboratory for this work. Saenz鈥檚 ultimate vision is to see this methodology adopted by the 16 New Mexico schools in the nursing consortium, and eventually across the nation.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 teach students what to think. That鈥檚 impossible,鈥 Saenz concluded. 鈥淚 set them up with a framework for聽how to think for themselves. In the lab, I tell them not to be afraid of failure. If you don鈥檛 make the mistake here, we can鈥檛 learn from it. At 糖心视频, we walk a greater distance with our students, and this framework is another way we ensure they are prepared for success.鈥
Born and raised in Bayard, New Mexico, Saenz鈥檚 journey in creating the new methodology is a story of purpose forged in experience. The catalyst for his medical career came from a moment of helplessness on a job. 鈥淥ne of the workers next to me had a seizure, and I didn鈥檛 know what to do and I felt powerless,鈥 Saenz recalled. After the incident with his co-worker, Saenz met with an Army recruiter. Saenz was determined to ensure he could always help people in distress so he served as a combat medic in the U.S. Army鈥檚 prestigious 鈥淏ig Red One鈥 mechanized infantry unit.
After his military service, Saenz worked for a Mobile Training Team, using high-fidelity simulators to assess the competency of Army medics in realistic, high-stress field environments. This experience planted the seed for his work at WNMU.
鈥淚 am filled with absolute gratitude for WNMU and the School of Nursing and Kinesiology for being willing to take a gamble on an unproven idea,鈥 Saenz said. 鈥淭hey gave me the latitude to try something new, to build a method where students address the patient first and use their clinical judgment.鈥
