Originally Posted by nurselily3
Hey All,
I'm beginning to think that I need to go back to school and get my masters. My current employer will pay for 6 hours of grad school credit a semester which sounds pretty good. I'm a little discouraged in my current job and am looking for a new horizon so to speak. I'm not interested in being a CRNA..don't want to do H & P's all day either. I think I might really like staff development. So, what kind of masters should I persue? I was thinking Clinical Specialist...but not so sure. Our University provides a MSN with an emphasis in Nursing Management/Leadership...although this really isn't what I want to do. Can anyone give me some advice.
P.S. I'm also wondering what the starting salary will be about. And, how is the job market for this type of job?
The fact that you state,
"I think I might really like staff development," hints that you're investigating other options. GREAT! No use spending hard-earned time/dollars/labor in a course of study that might not suit your future career goals. Staff Development departments vary on the graduate educational requirements for their Nurse Educators but most do favor a MSN. The question lies with what focus? Leadership/Management? Clinical Specialization? Nursing Education? The fact that your employer will provide some financial assistance is a thumbs-up towards supporting your educational goals.

Before enrolling in a specific graduate degree program, investigate the following:
1. Review various graduate degree curriculums to decide which programs will best suit your needs and your desire.
2. Collect data from various Staff Development departments on their educational requirements for RNs who teach. (I purposely didn't use the term Nurse Educator because in some healthcare facilities the Staff Development department and the Nursing Education department
are separate).
3. Talk to RN veterans who work in Staff Development for an heads-up on any
other credentialing that Staff Development departments favor (i.e. national nursing specialty certifications, other graduate degree credentials---Education, Health Education, specialty institute credentialing, etc).
4. Contact the national nursing sepcialty organization in staff development for some feedback (Surf the Internet for the website).

I worked free-lance for a LT facility in their Staff Development department that was directed by an RN. My Masters Degree in my clinical specialty, clinical experience, specialty certifications all provided an impressive package. I also worked part-time at a 5-hospital complex as a Nurse Educator in a separate Department of Nursing and again, the same above package worked.

Professionally, you will decide on what educational track will work for you but do your homewrk first so that you don't
cut yourself short of the
best package of educational /clinical specialty credentials that will work for you and enrich your knowledge base/skills.

I hope that I have helped you.

Much success to you and WELCOME to the family of
STAFF DEVELOPMENT NURSES!