Educating leaders in nursing: Faculty perspectives

Kathleen A. Kalb, Susan K. O'Conner-Von, Lindsay M. Schipper, Alison K. Watkins, Dawn M. Yetter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recent changes in health care legislation have presented an unprecedented opportunity for nurses to engage as full partners in transforming health care (Institute of Medicine, 2010). According to diverse opinion leaders from insurance, corporate, health services, government, and higher education, nurses should have more influence than they do now on health policy, planning, and management (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2010). More than ever before, nursing needs leaders, and nursing faculty are in a pivotal position to educate leaders in nursing. This article describes the findings of a descriptive study that surveyed nursing faculty teaching in all degree levels to ascertain how they prepare students to be leaders in nursing. Data were analyzed using qualitative methods. Findings demonstrate that faculty engage in self-development as leaders, promote student role development as leaders, and use multiple teaching-learning strategies to educate students to be leaders in nursing. Copyright.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number1
JournalInternational Journal of Nursing Education Scholarship
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
∗This research study was supported by a Faculty Research and Scholarly Activities Grant awarded by St. Catherine University. The researchers acknowledge Laura Duckett, BSN, MPH, PhD, RN, Associate Professor, School of Nursing, University of Minnesota. No remuneration or other consideration was received from Scientific Software Development GmbH (Berlin, Germany) for the use of Atlas.ti 5.0 software in data analysis.

Keywords

  • Leadership
  • Nurse leaders
  • Nursing education
  • Nursing faculty

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