Re: nurses vs. nursing clinical/class intructors
Actually, educational requirements for clinical instructors vary depending on the type of program and the type of school the program is located in. I have taught clinical nursing courses at a community college here in Oakland County, Michigan where some of the clinical instructors only have a BSN as their highest nursing degree. This was also not too long ago (Winter Semester 2004). The students in that school were enrolled in either the associate degree program in nursing or the Licensed Practical Nursing certificate program. However, you will never find a single clinical instructor in that institution with less than 5 years of actual nursing experience after having received their RN license.
In the state university where I received my MSN from, all the clinical instructors have a master's degree and all faculty in the tenure-track positions (Associate Professors all the way to Full Professors) had either a PhD or a DNSc. In that institution, the BSN is the lowest degree offered. The school also offers MSN and PhD programs in nursing.
As far as salaries, again, I can only speak for the community college I taught in. We were being paid an hourly rate as part-time faculty and it was at least 5 dollars more than the hourly rate I was receiving in the hospital at the time but we were offered no benefits. The full time faculty were being paid a salary which was around $50,000-60,000 a year, obviously not as competitive as a staff nurse with high seniority and who works plenty of overtime. However, that full time faculty pay does not include full state employee benefits, days off when school is on a break, and less than 40 hours of work a week. I think that makes it attractive even though the base pay doesn't seem to be competitive.
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