Putting Innovations in Nursing Education to the Test
February 25, 2010 | Story
RWJF program funds evaluations of creative new approaches to address the nurse faculty shortage.
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February 25, 2010 | Story
RWJF program funds evaluations of creative new approaches to address the nurse faculty shortage.
January 11, 2010 | Story
More than 350 nurses, public policy experts and health care professionals gathered to focus on nursing education. The simultaneous webcast of the event drew 330 live viewers.
February 1, 2004 | Journal Article
Currently, the community of academic nursing centers finds itself in an age of both uncertainty and opportunity. In this article Sara Barger, Dean and Professor at the University of Alabama, Capstone College of Nursing and RWJF Executive Nurse Fello ...
May 1, 2000 | Journal Article
Identifying the skills needed by practicing public health workers if they are to successfully fill roles in the current and emerging public health system.
June 24, 2009 | Story
A Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) helped Southern University in Charleston, S.C., renovate the nursing school's skills laboratory and purchase a state-of-the-art patient simulator.
June 19, 2009 | Story
An acute shortage of faculty.
June 19, 2009 | Story
Nurses with master’s and doctoral degrees can serve as faculty or in advanced practice roles.
September 23, 2008 | Story
This fall and next spring and summer, 706 accelerated nursing students will each receive a $10,000 scholarship to pursue a nursing degree thanks to the fast work and cooperation of multiple individuals behind the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's New ...
October 1, 2006 | Program Result
The Association of Academic Health Centers (AAHC) commissioned a white paper that examined the extent and causes of the nursing faculty shortage and proposed possible solutions.
July 1, 1999 | Program Result
From 1993 through 1997, Maryland Project L.I.N.C. (previously, Project L.I.N.C.) enrolled 75 students in the program. More than 50 percent of these participants were minorities.