2019-2020 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing
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Return to: College of Health Sciences
351A Health Sciences Center,
(307) 766‑4312
FAX: (307) 766-4294
Web site: www.uwyo.edu/Nursing
Dean: Sherrill J. Smith
Associate Dean: TBD
Professors:
PAMELA N. CLARKE, B.S.N. Wayne State University 1969; M.P.H. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 1971; Ph.D. Wayne State University 1983; Professor of Nursing 2003.
ANN MARIE HART, B.S.N. Medical College of Virginia 1991; M.S. University of Wyoming 1996; Ph.D. University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Denver 2003; Professor of Nursing 2015.
SHERRILL J. SMITH, B.S.N. University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire 1985; M.S. Wright State University 1997; Ph.D. University of Northern Colorado 2008; Professor of Nursing 2019; Dean of Nursing 2019.
Associate Professor:
JENIFER THOMAS, B.S. Colorado State University 1994; M.S. Avila University 2000; M.S. Colorado State University 2007; Ph.D. 2008; Associate Professor of Nursing 2016.
Assistant Professors:
REBECCA CARRON, B.S.N. Texas Christian University 1976; B.A. University of Wyoming 1997; M.S. 2006; Ph.D. University of Colorado 2014; Assistant Professor of Nursing 2014.
SARAH KOOIENGA, B.S.N. Rush University 1983; M.S.N. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 1988; Ph.D. Oregon Health Sciences University 2006; Assistant Professor of Nursing 2014.
Clinical Assistant Professor:
ESTHER GILMAN-KEHRER, B.S.N. University of Wyoming 1986; M.S. 1998; D.N.P. University of Colorado 2012; Clinical Assistant Professor 2014.
NANCY MCGEE, B.S.N. University of Wyoming 2005; M.S. 2007; D.N.P. University of Northern Colorado 2014; Clinical Assistant Professor 2015.
J’LAINE PROCTOR, B.S.N. University of Wyoming 2000; M.S. 2003; CertificatePMHNP 2007; D.N.P. University of Northern Colorado 2014; Clinical Assistant Professor 2014.
Senior Lecturer:
Kimberly Raska-Miller
Associate Lecturers:
K. David Bodily, Elizabeth Goodwin, Marilyn Hall, Sherrie Rubio-Wallace, Candace Stidolph, Rachel Thomas, Candace Tull
Assistant Lecturers:
Paula Belknap, Paula Kihn, Christina Warren
Adjunct and Part-time Faculty:
Amy Aldrich, Nicole Alexander, Jamie AnthonyMathews, Nikki Armstrong, Tracy Baum, Karen Benjamin, Shelley Benson, Diane Boyle, Colleen Butler, Carol Campbell, Cate Campisi, William T. Carter, Robin Cole, Mary Cox, Denise Curtis, Jennifer Curtis, Robyn Curtis-Rice, Wesley Davis, Kimberly Donohue, Michelle Dowling, Sharon Farra, Jennifer Favilla, James Fleenor, Shelby Frost, Deborah Gaspar, Brian Gee, Julian Good, Grace Gosar, Pete Gosar, Sheriedan Grannan, Nancy Granum, Amy Gruwell, Jennifer Helmer, Jesse Henry, Julie Hummer-Bellmeyer, Barbara James, Dawn Jensen, Amy Johnson, Sunny Kaste, Melanie Kawulok, Katie Keller, Carol Kobulnicky, Cheryl Koski, Kara Laughlin, Anthony Leonard, Susan McLaughlin, Sue Lowe, Katherine Miller, May Nara, Marcia Newell, Brian O’Neill, Jennifer Oiler, Daiva Olipra, Sarah Penn, Collin Prince, Mary Ann Purtzer, Chelsea Raymer, Rasha Riad, Michael Rice, Vickie Richards, Amy Robohm, Lettie Seamount, Marlene Shaw, Cynthia Smith, Shawn Snyder, Veronica Taylor, Cassie Terfehr, Dyan Thompson, Joslyn Thompson, Kate Thompson, Teresa Thompson, Weldonna Toth, Cynthia Weber, Linda Williams, Wendy Wood Neeson, Wendy Wright
Emeriti:
Pamela D. Larsen, Beverly McDermott, Holly Miller, Mary Anne Purtzer, Susan H. Steiner, Beverly Taheri-Kennedy, Fay W. Whitney, Norma Wilkerson
The Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing (FWWSON) has well established B.S.N, M.S., and D.N.P. programs based upon national nursing education standards.
Mission
The FWWSON educates, conducts research and provides service and practice to improve, protect and promote health.
Accreditation and Membership
The baccalaureate and graduate programs are accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE).
The baccalaureate program (Basic BSN, BRAND) is approved by the Wyoming State Board of Nursing (WSBN). Graduates of the Basic BSN and BRAND options are qualified to apply for admission to the national licensing examination: NCLEX. Graduates of the DNP Program are eligible to take the national certification exams as a nurse practitioner.
Technical Standards for Admission
All nursing students must be able to perform the essential functions of a nurse, including observation/sensory motor; communication; psychomotor; intellectual-conceptual, integrative and quantitative; and behavioral and social attributes. Please refer to the “Technical Standards for Admission”, including information on reasonable accommodations, on the school’s website: http://www.uwyo.edu/nursing/programs/technical-standards-for-admission.html.
Background Checks Requirement
Students enrolled in clinical training programs within the College of Health Sciences are placed in educational and clinical settings where highly vulnerable clients such as minor children, individuals with disabilities, and/or the elderly, are routinely served. These clinical/ practice training sites (including schools, hospitals, pharmacies, and other university sites) routinely require criminal background checks for all students who engage in clinical activities. Therefore, background checks shall be required on all applicants to programs in the College of Health Sciences prior to admission into their prospective program.
Students applying for admission into the nursing major component of the BSN Program, the MS Program, and the DNP Program will be notified by the FWWSON at the time of any admission offer the process for completing the required background check. Previous background checks (e.g. CNA Certification, LPN or RN Licensure) are not acceptable to fulfill this expectation. The results of the background check may determine final admittance to the program.
Students may also be required to update the criminal background check. Each clinical training site will be informed that students have passed a background check prior to placement at that site; some sites may require a more current background check. Clinical agencies may bar a student access to their facility for clinical experiences based on the results of the background check. If faculty and staff are not able to place the student in an alternative setting, the student will not be able to complete the program. In addition, students seeking readmission into the program are required to complete a new background check. Students are responsible for the costs associated with the admission background check and any other background checks that may be required.
Drug Screening Requirements
Drug screening may be required by some clinical training sites. Students will be notified by the FWWSON should this be an expectation of them. Students may incur charges for this screening and will be notified of such at that time. Drug and/or alcohol testing for any student can be requested by the FWWSON.
The Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing provides a curriculum based on the solid foundation of a general studies program. University students are individuals who come with learning preferences, different experiences, varied goals, and therefore, have unique learning needs. The primary responsibility of faculty is to empower students to become self-directed learners. Active learning is a teaching/learning partnership.
Expected Student Learning Outcomes
At completion of the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) degree, graduates will be able to meet the end of program student learning outcomes:
- Minimize risk of harm to patients and providers through both system effectiveness and individual performance.
- Advance nursing practice related to patient care technologies, information systems, and communication devices that support safe nursing practice.
- Achieve optimal individual, family, group, community, and population outcomes guided by clinical reasoning and appraisal of evidence of best practice.
- Demonstrate effective leadership through heightened self-awareness to empower others in the attainment of optimal patient outcomes.
- Use mutually respectful communication, collaboration, and leadership skills within interprofessional teams in the management of care in diverse, complex, global, and dynamic healthcare systems.
- Participate as a nursing professional in the development and implementation of healthcare policy, finance, and regulatory entities, including local, state, national, and global healthcare trends.
- Provide patient centered care by reflecting on the uniqueness of an individual patient’s background, personal preferences, culture, values, traditions, and family which promotes optimal health outcomes by involving patients and families as they make clinical care decisions.
- Demonstrate respectful, efficient, safe, and well-coordinated transitions of the patient through all levels of care.
- Provide respectful, efficient, safe and well-coordinated patient-centered care to populations by reflecting on beliefs, values, attitudes, and practices.
- Model professionalism with consistent demonstration of core values evidenced by nurses working with others to achieve optimal health and wellness outcomes in patients, families, and populations by wisely applying principles of altruism, excellence, caring, ethics, respect, com-munication, professional engagement, lifelong learning, and accountability.
- Encourage evidence-based health promotion and make a positive contribution to immediate and long-term health status, through the provision of education to individuals, families, groups, communities, and populations that encourages healthy behaviors and choices, prevention of disease, protection from preventable illness and disastrous emergencies.
Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) Program Options
The Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing offers a baccalaureate program with three options to obtain the BSN degree:
- Basic BSN - a four-year, on-campus BSN option for the student wishing to become a registered nurse at the baccalaureate level.
- Bachelors Reach for Accelerated Nursing Degree (BRAND) - an accelerated BSN outreach option for the student who has already achieved a previous non-nursing baccalaureate degree and wishes to become a registered nurse at the baccalaureate level.
- BSN Completion - two online BSN options (ReNEW and RN-BSN) for graduates of an associate degree nursing program who wish to become a baccalaureate prepared nurse.
Please refer to the appropriate program option section that follows below.
Graduate Study
The Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing offers two graduate programs leading to: 1) a Master of Science (M.S.) degree and 2) a Doctor of Nursing Practice (D.N.P.) degree.
Return to: College of Health Sciences
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