Published
Read this on another board, checked for myself. Under FAQs 1st question:
Kansas will no longer accept EC grads for licensure or endorsement
Q. Do distance learning and non-traditional programs qualify for licensure in Kansas? A. The Kansas State Board of Nursing has received numerous inquiries lately regarding "distance learning" and non-traditional programs that do not include a clinical component in the curriculum.
The statutes and regulations establish that:
(1) Applicants for licensure must have graduated from an approved school of nursing (KSA 65-1115 [a] [2] and KSA 65-1116 [a] [3]);
(2) To be approved, a nursing program must provide clinical experience (KAR 60-2-104 [c] & [d]);
(3) Furthermore, the faculty in each nursing program must "direct clinical instruction as an integral part of the program" (KAR 60-2-104 [a] [3]);
(4) The clinical component of the program must entail "an active process in which the student participates in nursing activities while being guided by a member of the faculty" (KAR 60-1-104 [e]); and
(5) An out-of-state school must maintain standards at least equal to in-state schools approved by the board in order for the board to consider graduates from that school qualified for licensure. (KSA 65-1119 [f].
Performance examinations alone do not meet the requirements of direct clinical instruction as an integral part of the program or an active process in which the student participates in nursing activities while being guided by a member of the faculty. Therefore, if programs do not have a comprehensive clinical component, graduates will not qualify for licensure in Kansas. Graduates of nursing programs that lack a clinical component who have obtained a nursing license in another state will not be qualified to obtain licensure in Kansas by endorsement. These persons must meet the Kansas qualifications for licensure.
If you have had clinical education please contact the education department.