Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
Nursing Faculty - Nursing Educators /

Online PhD in nursing programs



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 388,756 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Dec 10, 2007 10:19 PM

Online PhD in nursing programs

by janhetherington Premium Member

Can anyone recommend a good online PhD in nursing program, or know of a source for a list of such programs? Thanks!


Share

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Reply
2 Comments
No. 1
from VickyRN
Old Dec 14, 2007, 07:23 AM

Default Re: Online PhD in nursing programs
This should be of immense help in your search. Press release (12/13/07) by NLN:


Quality of Online Doctoral Programs Examined

NLN's Nursing Education Perspectives Looks into Latest Strategy for Boosting Nurse Faculty Credentials to Promote Standards of Excellence in Nursing Education
New York, NY – December 13, 2007 – A well-documented shortage of PhD-prepared nurse educators has prompted the creation of online doctoral-level programs that may be delivered to those currently employed. Thus, nurse educators holding master's degrees now have increasing opportunity to continue their education without having to drop other professional commitments or leave their families behind to do so. Leaders in nursing education agree that the persistent and acute shortage of nurse faculty, fueling the nation's shortage of nurses entering clinical practice, has made it imperative to enable nurse educators of the future to remain on the job while enhancing their academic credentials.

But, just how effective are online doctoral programs? Are the pedagogical practices employed as good as those found in traditional classrooms? Is the training as rigorous? Do online doctoral candidates develop the necessary mentoring relationships with their professors? Are collaborative research relationships with fellow students facilitated or impeded by distance learning? And finally, how easily are the educational methods and scholarly concepts learned online translated into live teaching strategies and effectiveness in the classroom?

To answer these questions, Debra Woodard Leners, PhD, RN, PNP, CNE, Vicki W. Wilson, PhD, RN, and Kathleen L. Sitzman, MS, RN, examined previously established benchmarks in higher education and nursing education, which they used to create an evaluative matrix for ongoing review of online doctoral programs in nursing. They then field-tested the matrix by evaluating the online doctoral program at the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley.
Drs. Leners and Wilson teach in the program (Dr. Leners is the program coordinator and director of the School of Nursing); Ms. Sitzman, an assistant professor of nursing at Weber State University in Ogden, UT, is enrolled in it. Lending their research even greater significance is the fact that Northern Colorado is also the site of a nationally designated Center of Excellence in Education, giving nurse faculty in the doctoral program there access to best pedagogical practices and guidelines and standards of excellence.
In their analysis, the authors took into account feedback from both doctoral-level faculty and students in Northern Colorado's online doctoral program. The students typically are master's-level faculty teaching elsewhere. Among the positive points to emerge:
  • Students deem online doctoral study rigorous and challenging.
  • Meaningful, enriching, and frequent online contact between faculty and students indicate the potential for life-long mentoring relationships.
  • Student interaction through email and online chat rooms has engendered close collaborative and supportive peer relationships.
  • Online doctoral study has enhanced the academic environments of the institutions where the students currently teach.
Leners', Wilson's, and Sitzman's findings appear in the current issue of the NLN's peer-reviewed journal, Nursing Education Perspectives ("Twenty-first Century Doctoral Education: Online with a Focus on Nursing Education," Nov.-Dec., Vol. 28, No. 6).

The article can be found at http://nln.allenpress.com/pdfserv/i1536-5026-028-06-0332.pdf.
Top
 
No. 2
from turtle21
Old Oct 19, 2009, 12:23 PM

Default Re: Online PhD in nursing programs
I recieved a state board of nursing scholarship to pay for 2 semesters at a local state university to get my EdD/Nursing education doctorate. However, I really want to do an online PhD program- but I hate to give up the scholarship. I also wonder if I willl ever graduate from the traditional program since it requires a monthly residency stay of 3 days, which is 5 hours from my home. Any suggestions???
Top
 
Reply




Thread Tools


Who's Online
273 members
2,128 guests
2,401

3

Four Lehigh Valley Health Network nurses accused of...

48

lawsuit - But don't most RN's work through breaks/lunch...

0

Patient Evaluation of Retail Clinic Care

7

The hard to reach on-call doctor, and its effects on...

11

Woman charged with passing off prescription drug as...

26

Man in "Vegetative State" was conscious for 23...

2

Interesting article on ThedaCare's Collaborative Care Model

14

Possible breakthrough regarding MS

63

16th Philly area hospital to stop delivering babies: Mercy...

14

Really interesting article on Indian open hearts






Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: