2023-2024 Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog 
    
    May 05, 2024  
2023-2024 Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog

Nursing DNP, (Nursing Education Specialization)


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Doctor of Nursing Practice Program

College of Health Sciences
Degree: Doctor of Nursing Practice
Chair of Graduate Nursing Programs, Melissa Weidner, MSN, CRNP

Faculty

Melissa Diehl Weidner, Assistant Professor of Nursing, BSN College Misericordia, MSN and Post-Masters Certificate Thomas Jefferson University

Annette Weiss, Associate Professor of Nursing, BSN The Pennsylvania State University, MSN University of Hartford; PhD Duquesne University

Mission of the Nursing Department

The Nursing Department at Misericordia University embraces the charisms of mercy, service, justice and hospitality while preparing future nurses and nurse leaders for a life of service and global citizenship.  Students will actively engage in an evidence-based educational experience that promotes critical thinking and intellectual curiosity, grounded in the sciences and liberal arts.  The focus is to provide ethical, safe and humanistic care as part of the multidisciplinary healthcare team to optimize health outcomes for diverse individuals, families, and communities.

Vision of the Nursing Department

The Nursing Department at Misericordia University aims to be a leading provider of nursing education that inspires and empowers a diverse community of future nurse leaders to advance the profession and optimize health of all persons in a collaborative, culturally sensitive and rapidly expanding health care environment.

Doctor of Nursing Practice Program Philosophy

The Doctor of Nursing Practice at Misericordia University is designed to combine theory, practice and inquiry to produce the highest level of mastery in advanced practice nurses to meet the nation and world’s increasingly complex health care needs. Accomplishing this mission requires connecting leadership skills, forward thinking clinical expertise and evidence based practice knowledge to formulate quality health care initiatives for improved health care outcomes in a variety of settings. Graduates will be prepared to make a business case for evidence based practice change. Program outcomes are grounded in the Essentials of Doctoral Education for Advanced Nursing Practice developed by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. (2006).The rigorous expectations of the curriculum of this post-graduate degree program are supported by foundations in population health, quality improvement and organizational system management, leadership, ethics, health care policy, informatics and technology, and utilization of data analysis that informs decision-making. Five hundred (500) post-graduate practice hours provide the student with patient and population focused care opportunities for mastery of the doctor of nursing practice role.

As change agents, Misericordia DNP graduates will be prepared to collaborate with teams of inter-professional colleagues, care for culturally diverse and/or vulnerable populations, and assume the role of a transformational leader in the increasingly complex health care systems across the globe.

DNP Program outcomes:

  1. Influence the scientific underpinnings of advanced clinical nursing practice through strategic decision-making and change implementation.
  2. Apply organizational and system leadership skills to affect systematic changes in thinking and development of high quality improvement activities to improve health care outcomes.
  3. Utilize analytic methods to critically appraise evidence based literature and other data to improve health care outcomes for diverse populations.
  4. Integrate current information systems and technologies to promote effective methods of care to improve the transformation of health care.
  5. Develop health care policies that facilitate advocacy for equitable health care and social justice to vulnerable and diverse populations.
  6. Collaborate with inter-professional team members to enhance prevention and health promotion of patient and population health.
  7. Synthesize the concepts of community, environment, culture, and socioeconomic dimensions of health into advanced practice for improvement of the nation’s health.
  8. Model advanced level of clinical judgment, systems thinking and accountability in designing, implementing and evaluating evidence based care to improve health care outcomes.

Admission Criteria

  1. Official transcripts of all previous college work, including graduate and undergraduate.
  2. Completion of an online application form.
  3. Master of Science in Nursing degree from a CCNE or NLN accredited institution.
  4. Copy of unencumbered license as a registered professional nurse and license to practice as an advanced practice nurse (CNM, CRNA, CNS, or CRNP).
  5. Copy of current national board certification as an Advanced Practice Nurse.
  6. Minimum of 3.0 GPA from graduate degree program or post-master’s certificate program for MSN to DNP program applicants.
  7. Two letters of reference (one from current or most recent employer, one from former graduate faculty member).
  8. A 500 word typed statement of personal and professional goals.
  9. English language proficiency- if English is not your first language, or if English is not the primary language spoken in your home, you must submit the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). The following are the minimum score requirements: Internet based TOEFL exam (iBT): The Internet based TOEFL exam has four subsections, with a grading scale for each section from 1 to 30 (30 being the highest score). Misericordia University will look closely at the score for each section rather than the total score. Applicants must attain the minimum scores for ALL sections in order to be considered for admission to the DNP program. The minimum scores for each section are as follows:
      Writing: 22
      Speaking: 22
      Reading: 22
      Listening: 22
      Students should indicate on the registration form that they wish their test results be sent directly to Misericordia University. The TOEFL code for Misericordia University is 2087.

Curriculum Information

The MSN to DNP program requires 27 credit hours of study and 500 practice hours. This program is designed for master’s prepared, advanced practice nurses (APN). Students receive credit for 500 practice hours after verification of national APN board certification and APN licensure. Completion of an additional 500 practice hours is required during the program for a total of 1000 hours. The MSN to DNP curriculum is completed part-time over two years and five semesters. Graduates of the MSN to DNP program earn the DNP degree upon successful completion of degree requirements of the ninth semester, in the summer of year three. MSN to DNP program students interested in future roles as nursing faculty members also have the option to complete a nine, credit specialization in nursing education.   

Program Scheduling

All DNP coursework is completed in a part-time online format. Selected courses may be offered in an accelerated format. All DNP courses are asynchronous. Occasional synchronous chat may be required for specific course assignments at the discretion of the DNP program faculty.

Graduate Program Progression and Retention

  1. DNP students must attain a GPA of 3.0 or better and maintain or exceed a 3.0 GPA for each semester of the graduate program.  The initial grade calculation happens at the end of the first semester and every semester after that.

  2. Please see the university graduate catalog for specific information on progression and retention in graduate programs. 

  3.  Grade replacement is not permitted in DNP programs.

  4. Any student receiving below a B- in more than two (2) courses (C+ or C in any combination) or a grade of F in any course will be dismissed from the DNP program. The student may never re-enter the graduate nursing program including entry into the post-master’s certificate programs.  These policies supersede those in the university’s graduate catalog.

  5. Once accepted into a program, all students must maintain matriculation on a continuing basis until the student has completed all program requirements, unless otherwise approved by the Chair of the Graduate Nursing Department.

Dismissal

  1. Academic Dismissal

  • Should a student fail to meet the terms of probation or meet the retention criteria after being placed on departmental probation, the student will automatically be dismissed from the Graduate Department of Nursing. Once dismissed from the program the student will not be able to apply for readmission to the Graduate Nursing Programs, including the post-master’s NP program.
  • Additionally, any student who is found guilty of cheating in any form, will be automatically dismissed from the program with no option for return. 
  1. Professional Behavior and Civility Dismissal
  • Graduate Nursing Department faculty members endorse the American Nurses’ Association Code for Nurses (2015) and use this framework as a Student Code of Ethics (See Appendix A of the Graduate Student Nurse Handbook). 
  • Serious infractions of the Student Code of Ethics will result in immediate dismissal from the graduate nursing program with no option for readmission.
  • The MSN or DNP Director, along with the Graduate Nursing Chair will make a determination of the degree of seriousness of any infractions.
  • Students dismissed for ethical violations cannot re-apply to the Graduate Nursing Department for any further program of study.
  • Additional sanctions may be determined by the university as per the university catalog.
  • Students will be contacted within 72 hours of the infraction to determine next steps. 

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