2024-2025 Graduate Catalog
Forcht School of Nursing
|
|
Return to: Graduate Degrees
Program Mission
University of the Cumberlands’ Nursing Program Mission, Philosophy, Goals, Program Outcomes, and Values, reflect and support the University’s mission and vision. Our mission is to provide accessible and innovative higher education to shape the profession of nursing and the health care environment by developing leaders in education, research, and practice.
Program Vision
The vision of the Masters Nursing program is that the faculty, focusing on the application of clinical reasoning, research, evidence-based practice, collaboration, and leadership skills, will produce graduates that are prepared to become leaders, educators, researchers and clinicians in the nursing profession and to work in collaborative teams in a variety of settings including universities, health service organizations, primary care facilities, research centers, case management and political/legislative settings.
Purpose Statement/Program Overview
The master’s program in Nursing prepares candidates for the advanced practice role and certification as advanced practice nurses in Family Nurse Practitioner licensure. In addition to nurturing the assessment skills necessary for nurse practitioners, the program offers a curriculum based upon state board requirements, the CCNE Essentials of Master’s Education in Nursing, and curriculum guidelines provided by the Criteria for Evaluation of Nurse Practitioner Programs (NTF, 2016). The program integrates clinical skills, nursing theory, nursing research, advanced pathophysiology, pharmacology and health assessment, striving to provide the knowledge base and training required for those who wish to become nurse practitioners.
Philosophy
The philosophy of the Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner program is based on the premise that advanced practice nurses provide an avenue for access to healthcare for millions of Americans, especially rural populations, through health promotion, prevention and management of disease of individuals across the lifespan. Family Nurse Practitioners utilize a unique blend of clinical practice expertise with evidence-based practice, current practice guidelines, as well as holistic care in order to provide health management, promote wellness and relieve suffering.
Advanced practice nurses’ impact global healthcare by providing diverse and culturally-sensitive medical care to all populations through a comprehensive approach integrating theory, research, technology, inter-professional collaboration and evidence-based practice. In the Family Nurse Practitioner concentration, students builds upon Baccalaureate education and acquire theoretical and specific knowledge to meet health care needs and expand their scope of practice. The Master of Science in Nursing program establishes a foundation for doctoral education in nursing and for continued personal and professional development, as well as empowering the student to recognize the ethical, legislative, economic, regulatory and political aspects that define the scope of professional nursing practice. The curriculum provides the student with a theoretical foundation to practice respectful and sensitive, professional nursing within the primary family practice setting.
The University of the Cumberland’s Department of Nursing upholds that Family Nurse Practitioners can effectively be utilized to empower individuals, families, groups and communities to achieve their highest levels of self-care competence. The nursing faculty are committed to planning and implementing a quality graduate program for registered nurses that promotes intellectual, personal, ethical and cultural development and the ability to think critically through knowledge and experience.
Students in the Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner program are adult learners. As such, students are viewed as self-directed, active learners who can identify their needs for knowledge, select the strategies that best facilitate their learning, link new knowledge with their current knowledge and utilize faculty feedback to improve their learning.
Program Goals
The Goals of the Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner program are to:
- Expand the integration of scientific findings from nursing, science, humanities, biopsychosocial fields, and organizational science in caring for individuals, families, groups, and communities across the lifespan and the continuum of healthcare environments.
- Promote application of research and foster advanced knowledge in translating and integrating scholarship into evidence-based nursing practice Expand critical thinking, problem-solving, and ethical decision-making skills to include servant leadership and the ability to evaluate and improve the quality and safety of healthcare.
- Impact healthcare outcomes through development of collaboration skills, effective communication, and proficient data management through the use of nursing informatics and healthcare technologies.
- Develop nursing leaders who will meet the needs of the healthcare community as well as impact health policy through advocacy, promote clinical prevention and population health, and model inter-professional collaboration.
- Expand critical thinking, problem-solving, and ethical decision-making skills to include servant leadership and the ability to evaluate and improve the quality and safety of healthcare.
Program Outcomes
Upon successful completion of the Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner program, graduates will be able to:
- Integrate nursing theory, concepts from humanities, and related sciences into the delivery of advanced nursing care for diverse populations and the advanced practice role.
- Apply leadership skills and decision making in the provisions of culturally responsive, safe, high quality nursing care.
- Implement evidence-based plans based on data to quantify the impact of quality and safety and improve health outcomes across the continuum of care, system, and organization.
- Integrate theory, research, and inter-professional perspectives to improve practice, healthcare delivery and systems, and health outcomes for patient aggregates.
- Use information and communication technologies to support the organization, integrate and coordinate care, and improve health outcomes.
- Analyze how healthy policy and advocacy influence the structure of healthcare delivery, financing of health care, and health outcomes.
- Use effective communication strategies to develop, participate, and lead inter-professional teams to improve healthcare delivery and advance nursing practice.
- Integrate clinical prevention and population health concepts in the development of culturally competent care for improving health of patient aggregates.
- Demonstrate the professional standards of moral, ethical, and legal conduct of the advanced practice role.
- Collaborate with other healthcare professionals to improve systems of care and to optimize patient and population health outcomes.
- Conceptualize and incorporate an evolving personal nursing philosophy based on professional advanced nursing standards, practice, accountability and life-long learning.
Values
The core values of the Nursing program are caring, diversity, integrity, leadership, collaboration, respect, and excellence. The values are defined as follows:
- Caring-offering of self (intellectual, psychological, spiritual, and physical aspects one possesses as human beings) to attain a goal. In nursing the goal is to facilitate and enhance the patient’s ability to do and decide for themselves
- Diversity-embraces not only ethnic groups and people of color, but also other marginal or vulnerable people in society. Response to diversity is the nurse’s ability to recognize, appreciate, and incorporate differences (individuality, spiritual, cultural, ethnicity, family configurations, values, socioeconomic status, beliefs) into provisions of care
- Integrity-acting in accordance with appropriate professional code of ethics and accepted standards of practice
- Leadership- seen as a role of influence, not just as a position of authority. Leadership is the development of skills that allow the leader to coordinate, guide and direct groups through transformational approachemphasizing a positive work environment, using change effectively, rewarding staff for expertise and performance, and development of staff awareness.
- Collaboration- interdisciplinary and interdisciplinary effort among health care providers, patients and families, in which there is mutual trust and understanding that each partner contributes to the relationship toward achieving optimal, realistic goals.
- Respect for students as autonomous adult learners
- Excellence-develops nursing workforce that surpasses ordinary standards of care
Admission to the Nursing Department
A baccalaureate degree with a concentration in nursing is required for admission into the graduate program. Entrylevel applicants must (i) have graduated from a regionally accredited or state-approved institution of higher education and earned a four-year baccalaureate degree in nursing; and (ii) hold a current and unencumbered Registered Nurse license.
Secondary-track applicants must (i) have attended a postgraduate program at a regionally accredited or stateapproved institution of higher education and earned a master’s degree in nursing; and (ii) hold a current and unencumbered Registered Nurse license.
All applicants must submit the following information:
- Completed application and $30 application fee.
- Transcripts of all undergraduate and graduate coursework from all colleges and universities attended. A minimum cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 3.0 for all prior coursework is required for full admission. A conditional admission will be considered for applicants with a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 2.75. If conditional admittance is granted, a GPA of 3.0 is expected with the completion of 12 hours of coursework.
- A 500-700-word Statement of Purpose for graduate study.
- Two Letters of Reference from individuals commenting on the applicant’s academic and professional potential.
- Evidence of a current and unencumbered Registered Nurse license
- Completion of a three hour graduate or undergraduate course in statistics with a grade of C or higher. A conditional admission may be granted if the applicant is unable to submit evidence of prior completion but this requirement must be met within the first 12 hours of coursework.
Students may be admitted into this Master’s program on one of two licensure tracks:
- Students with a baccalaureate degree in Nursing are admitted into the 2 Year Entry-Level Track.
- Students who have already earned a master’s degree in Nursing in another concentration (ex. Nursing Administration or Nursing Education) may be admitted into the 18 month Secondary Track.
Entry-Level Track (2 Years).
Students who have graduated from a regionally accredited or state-approved institution of higher education with a baccalaureate degree in Nursing would begin the Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner in this track.
This full 48-semester-hour curriculum may be completed in two years and includes online courses and 720 clinical hours (including the final practicum). There are 24 credit hours of didactic courses that are offered in an eightweek, bi-term format. Eighteen credit hours will be offered through blended learning requiring online didactic course work with the addition of onsite clinical practice with a University approved clinical preceptor. The remaining six hours of the curriculum will be completed through the concentrated Clinical Practicum. The master’s degree is conferred upon successful completion of all coursework and the Clinical Practicum.
Secondary Track (1 Year).
Students who have attended a postgraduate program at a regionally-accredited or state-approved institution of higher education and earned a master’s degree in nursing with a different concentration (ex. Nursing Administration or Nursing Education) would begin the Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner in Secondary track in order to be eligible to test for Advanced Practice Board Certification.
Students will be required to complete the 33 hours of curriculum specific to a Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner concentration: Advanced Pharmacology, Advanced Health Assessment, Advanced Pathophysiology, FNP Advanced Practice I, II, and III as well as 360 hours of supervised clinical and an additional 360 hours of supervised clinical internship (total of 720 clinical hours for the program). Students will be required to take any course required by University of the Cumberlands that they did not complete successfully at their previous institution. Up to 15 semester hours of transfer credit are permitted from a regionally-accredited institution of higher education. The 33-hour curriculum includes online courses, 360 hours of supervised clinical, and an additional 360 hours of supervised clinical internship (total of 720 clinical hours for the program).
In addition, 100% of the didactic hours of the curriculum can be completed online. The remainder of the curriculum is delivered through completion of the Clinical Practicum requirements utilizing University approved preceptors and clinical sites. The post master’s certificate is conferred upon successful completion of all coursework and the Clinical Practicum.
ProgramsMaster of Science in Nursing
Return to: Graduate Degrees
|