The concept of ITSs is widely implemented across educational settings, but their adoption in nursing education remains poorly understood. To investigate the current state of evidence on ITS in nursing education, identify research gaps and provide recommendations for future research and practice. A scoping review based on the JBI methodology framework. A systematic literature search was initiated (between June and October 2025) across several databases (IEEE Xplore, PubMed, MEDLINE, ERIC, ProQuest, ScienceDirect, and Google Scholar). Grey literature sources and websites of key organisations (e.g., NMC, NICE, IHI, NHS) were also searched. There were no date restrictions, but only articles in English were considered. The screening and selection process was based on the extended PRISMA-ScR framework. Initially, 881 records were retrieved, but 9 studies were included in our scoping review and analysed. Our results indicate that research on ITS in nursing remains limited, with most studies presenting incomplete ITS architectures that focus primarily on domain models or standalone concepts. Among the 9 studies, there is limited evidence suggesting considerations of user-needs evaluation, theoretical frameworks, empirical validation, or curricular integration. Evidence on ITS in nursing education is limited and inconsistent. Our results led to recommendations for future research and practice, including developing a grounded theory of user perspectives, conducting rigorous empirical evaluations, designing and testing comprehensive ITS architectures aligned with nursing education philosophies, and promoting inclusivity by involving underrepresented populations and low-resource settings. • The first review on Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITS) in nursing education • Conducted following JBI methodology and checklist, and screening process reported as per PRISMA-ScR • Only 9 studies were eligible for inclusion and analysed • The concept of ITS remains poorly investigated and inconsistent • Recommendations for future research and practices include grounded theory development, complete ITS design and development, establishing frameworks for implementation in nursing curriculum, a diverse and large study population and consideration of low-resource settings.
Dicheva et al. (Sun,) studied this question.