Published
Should I be concerned that my local community college their minimum requirement for a nursing instructor is a bachelors degree with two years of experience. It said MSN was preferred but does that mean if they don't find anyone that they would take someone with only a bachelors degree in no concentration and education?
Also, just because the school lists the minimum requirements for the positions, that doesn't mean they are actually hiring instructors who only meet the minimum requirements. In my experience teaching in ADN and BSN programs, faculty members have all had much more than the minimum requirements (in terms of clinical experience, at least) for the positions they were in.
dudette10, MSN, RN
3,530 Posts
In my state, an instructor must have a degree one level above that which they are teaching, so a BSN can legally teach at the CC level.
Keep in mind that education classes and student learning models are usually only included for Nurse Educator MSN programs. Most MSNs do not choose the NE concentration. In fact, at my school only one had an NE MSN; all others chose various NP concentrations.