NUR - Nursing
For basic students only. This course introduces students to the foundations of professional nursing practice. Topics include historical, philosophical and theoretical perspectives in nursing. In addition, the concepts of caring, communication, critical thinking and cultural competence are introduced. Emphasis is placed upon self-care, the nursing process, nursing theory, and legal and ethical aspects of nursing.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Acceptance to the nursing program.
For basic students only. This course provides students with a basic understanding of pathophysiology from a structural and functional organizational framework. It builds upon the student's knowledge in the sciences, and explores how alterations in structure and function disrupt the body as a whole. Physiological changes across the lifespan are examined. Students utilize critical thinking to analyze selected diseases for symptomatology, pathophysiology and implications for health care intervention.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or corequisite:
NUR 201.
For basic students only. (NUR 213 and NUR 213L must be taken concurrently). This course gives students the cognitive knowledge necessary to provide basic, safe, and effective care to diverse populations.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or corequisite:
NUR 201
For basic students only. This course provides the student with laboratory and clinical experiences directed toward the acquisition of foundational knowledge and skills to give safe, effective patient care to diverse populations. Focus is placed on the application of foundational knowledge learned in NUR 213. Experiences include lab and interactive computer activities, simulation experiences, and supervised clinical learning at selected health care facilities.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or corequisite:
NUR 201,
NUR 213
For basic students only. (NUR 218 and 218L must be taken concurrently.) This course provides the basic nursing student with knowledge and skills to obtain and record a health history and physical examination. Assessing the level of health and wellness of clients throughout the lifespan also is included. The course provides both a didactic and laboratory experience.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or corequisite:
NUR 201
Credit Hours: 0
For basic students only. In this course, knowledge from the physical, biological, behavioral and social sciences as well as the humanities, is applied for the provision of safe nursing care of child-bearing families. In a classroom setting, methodologies including case studies and interactive activities form the basis for the student to use the nursing process as a framework for addressing developmental change, illness prevention, health promotion, maintenance and restoration in child-bearing families. Particular emphasis will be placed on the prenatal, intrapartum and postnatal period.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
Completion of 200 level nursing core
Corequisites
NUR 314L.
For basic students only. The course provides students the opportunity to apply the concepts associated with responses of families during the childbearing cycle through a combination of laboratory and supervised clinical practice activities. Clinical experiences occur under faculty supervision in a variety of childbearing patient care settings.
Credit Hours: 1
Corequisites
NUR 314.
For basic students only. This course presents the essential concepts, theories and developmental processes vital in understanding the health concerns and problems of children, adolescents and their families. Students examine family-centered nursing care in the health promotion and health maintenance of infants, children and adolescents.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
Completion of 200 level nursing core
Corequisites
NUR 315L
For basic students only. This course provides students the opportunity to apply the essential concepts, theories and processes useful in meeting the health and developmental needs of children and their families. Learning experiences are provided to emphasize the role of the nurse and continuity of care in meeting the needs of children and families in acute care and community settings.
Credit Hours: 1
Corequisites
NUR 315.
For basic students only. This course explores the concepts and theories necessary to promote and restore health of adults and older adults with biological problems and their related physiological and psychological responses. There is an integration of both physical changes and developmental tasks with the implementation of care considerations of patients throughout the life span.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Completion of 200 level nursing core. Prerequisite or corequisite:
NUR 317L,
NUR 345,
NUR 347
This course provides students the opportunity to apply concepts and processes learned in the classroom to help adults and older adults in the promotion and maintenance of health. Students examine both adults and older adults from physical, social, psychological and developmental perspectives through a combination of supervised clinical practice activities. Clinical experiences will occur under faculty supervision in a variety of both acute and long-term patient care settings. 140 clinical hours are provided during the semester.
Credit Hours: 2
Corequisites
NUR 317
For basic and pre-MSN students. The health care delivery system is examined from political, economic, legal and ethical perspectives with particular emphasis on the written analysis of legal and ethical dilemmas related to the practice of nursing.
Credit Hours: 3
(W)
This course introduces essential skills and techniques for effective communication and relationship building in nursing and other healthcare fields. Based on assertive communication for quality and patient safety, students will: examine step-by-step guidelines to establish relationships with patients, families and colleagues; reflect on how personal style affects communication; demonstrate an understanding of the connection between communication and caring; and explore strategies for self-care to build confidence for personal and professional effectiveness. Specific situations will be explored such as: working with people who are distressed or aggressive; managing team conflict; confrontation; working in groups; electronic communication; and professional dress and demeanor as nonverbal communication.
Credit Hours: 3
For basic students only. This course introduces students to the fundamentals of pharmacology and therapeutics in the treatment of illness, and the promotion, maintenance and restoration of health in patients across the lifespan. The major drug categories are reviewed with emphasis placed on the therapeutic use, action and adverse reaction, as well as benefits and risks to the drug therapy. This prepares the health professional for safe, therapeutic pharmacological interventions.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Completion of 200 level nursing core
Corequisites
NUR 317
Subtitle: Health Promotion through the Arts. This course examines creativity through a variety of expressive art forms to promote healing for clients and to heal the healer, an imperative for holistic nurses. Various art forms are explored, including visual arts, mask-making, visual and written journals, storytelling, movement and others. Students experience expressive arts through guided exercises and art practices.
Credit Hours: 3
(A)
For basic students only. This course provides information on the fundamentals of nutrition and application. Nutritional needs across the lifespan and nutritional support in selected disorders are specifically discussed.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
Completion of 200 level nursing core
All students: permission of instructor. This course allows students to travel to a selected Latin American country to apply community health promotion and disease prevention concepts in a trans-cultural environment.
Credit Hours: 3
(IG)
Prerequisites
200 level courses (Basic BSN), or
HSC 200 or
HSC 236 and
HSC 350 or
PSY 211 (ESC students).
For basic students only. This course examines the biological, environmental, cultural and interpersonal factors that predispose individuals to mental illness. Mental health is viewed as the continuous adaptation to the inevitable stressors of life, and deviations are a result of the inability of individuals to adapt to life's stressors. Individuals are viewed holistically across the lifespan.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
Completion of 300 level nursing core
Corequisites
NUR 410L
For basic students only. The course provides students the opportunity to apply the concepts of mental health nursing through a combination of laboratory and supervised clinical practice. Clinical experiences occur under faculty supervision in a variety of settings in which patients and families with acute and chronic mental health problems may be found.
Credit Hours: 1
Corequisites
NUR 410.
For basic students only. This course examines advanced concepts related to patients experiencing complex multi-system biological problems and related physiological and psychological responses.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Completion of 300 level nursing core. Prerequisites or corequisites:
NUR 412L
For basic students only. The course provides the opportunity for students to apply advanced concepts and processes required to help adults with complex multi-system problems. Students examine adults from physical, social, psychological and developmental perspectives through a combination of laboratory and supervised clinical practice activities. Clinical experiences occur under faculty supervision in a variety of acute care settings.
Credit Hours: 2
Corequisites
NUR 412.
For basic students, pre-MSN students, or with instructor approval. This course examines key concepts in leadership and management within the health care system. Emphasis is on organizing and delivering health care, assessing financial resources, planning, managing human resources, improving quality and promoting positive change.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
For basic students, completion of 300-level nursing core
For basic students and pre-MSN students. This course focuses on the community health system by examining it from historical, organizational and political perspectives. Emphases are on analysis of epidemiological trends and the relevance of community assessment to community health nursing practice. The impact of local, state and federal legislation is explored related to the impact on community health.
Credit Hours: 3
Corequisites
NUR 422L
For basic students only. The course provides the opportunity to synthesize and apply cognitive knowledge of community health nursing. Through supervised clinical practice, students provide culturally competent care to individuals, families and groups in a variety of community agencies. This course includes 4 hours of clinical per week plus a class seminar. For those students enrolled in the travel section of NUR 422L, 40-60 clinical hours will be gained through education abroad; the additional requisite hours will be completed in a local community setting plus a class seminar.
Credit Hours: 2
Corequisites
NUR 422
This course will review the key concepts of palliative care and end-of-life nursing care. Topics covered utilizing the End-of-Life Nursing Consortium (ELNEC) training modules will include: pain and symptom management, ethical issues, cultural considerations, communication techniques, care during the final hours of life, and loss, grief and bereavement. In addition, the practice of palliative care in special populations and in various settings will be discussed. This course will be highly interactive and will include opportunities to hear from guest speakers that are experts in the field of palliative and end-of-life care.
Credit Hours: 3
(W)
Prerequisites
Completion of 200 level nursing core.
Open to non-nursing students. This course examines alternative health practices from a cross-cultural perspective. Healing interventions such as acupuncture, biofeedback, homeopathy, meditation, and traditional Chinese and herbal medicine are studied and demonstrated by practitioners. Emphases are on the historical underpinnings of holistic health practices and the political/economic ramifications on global health. This course also compares and contrasts nontraditional modalities of health care with industrial models.
Credit Hours: 3
(IG) (NW)
For basic students and pre-MSN students. Students will learn about discipline-specific writing and research processes for nursing studies and engage nursing research through formal and informal writing work.
Credit Hours: 3
(W)
Prerequisites
For basic students:
NUR 201 and statistics
For basic students only. This course introduces the novice nursing student to the field of nursing informatics. Nursing informatics is the specialty that integrates nursing science with information technology and analytical sciences to identify, define, manage, and communicate data, information, and knowledge to support nursing practice in providing safe patient care. Focus of this course includes identifying, researching, and presenting a proposal to update a specific health care technology device with the primary focus of patient safety.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Completion of 200 level nursing core:
NUR 201,
NUR 210,
NUR 213,
NUR 213L,
NUR 218
An independent study that provides students with an opportunity to pursue a topic or project under the guidance of a nursing faculty member. By permission of instructor and department director. May include a practicum.
Credit Hours: 1-3
For basic students only. This course focuses on the integration, analysis, and synthesis of knowledge acquired throughout the nursing curriculum. The student utilizes knowledge from the physical, biological and behavioral sciences to provide safe, high quality, culturally competent nursing care. Critical thinking skills are further developed. The student incorporates principles of teaching and learning to promote, maintain and restore health.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
NUR 412,
NUR 412L
For basic students only. This seminar course addresses professional role transition and assists the student in preparing for the NCLEX-RN licensure examination.
Credit Hours: 3
Corequisites
NUR 415
For elective credit only. An in-depth study of a selected nursing topic of concern to students and faculty. Emphasis is on contemporary issues affecting nursing and health care.
Credit Hours: 1-3
This course focuses on writing and communication skills for nursing professionals. Students will learn APA style and how to apply these rules in writing and communication in developing evidence-based practice (EBP) manuscripts and scholarly nursing presentations. Students will practice proper techniques for properly citing sources, preparing an EBP manuscript, developing PICOT statement and expressing material clearly and accurately. Must be taken in first academic term.
Credit Hours: 3
For graduate students only. This course focuses on current practice issues related to the emerging role of the nurse practitioner in health care delivery. Emphases are on critical review and analysis or role implementation strategies, and role performance as a clinician, educator, case manager, leader, consultant and colleague.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or Corerequisite:
NUR 600 or GRE equivalent.
For graduate students only. This course builds on the competencies acquired in a baccalaureate nursing assessment course, and expands expertise in completing comprehensive assessment and developing diagnostic reasoning skills. The course includes a laboratory experience.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisites or corequisites:
NUR 601
For graduate students only. Emphasizes knowledge development in nursing science through concurrent inductive analysis of models/methods of theory generation and deductive analysis of models/methods of theory validation through focus on quantitative and qualitative research processes. Provides opportunity for development of a theory linked research proposal that will support evidence-based advanced practice.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Prerequisites or corequisites:
NUR 601 and statistics.
For graduate students only. This course covers selected clinical topics in nurse practitioner practice including, but not exclusive to primary care procedures, emergencies/trauma, and wilderness medicine. Emphasis is placed on common procedures that would present to a primary care setting.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
Prerequisites or corequisites:
NUR 618 and NUR 618L. Permission of MSN program director required.
This course will review the key concepts of palliative care and end-of-life nursing care. Topics covered utilizing the End-of-Life Nursing Consortium (ELNEC) training modules will include: pain and symptom management, ethical issues, cultural considerations, communication techniques, care during the final hours of life, and loss, grief and bereavement. In addition, the practice of palliative care in special populations and in various settings will be discussed. This course will be highly interactive and will include opportunities to hear from guest speakers that are experts in the field of palliative and end-of-life care.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Graduate student status.
For graduate students only. This course emphasizes the clinical application of the major classifications of drugs and the development of knowledge needed by the advanced practice nurse to assure that drug therapy is based on sound therapeutic judgments and decision-making processes. A lifespan approach is utilized to address client needs of drug therapy in primary, secondary and tertiary care settings. Statutory authority for prescription writing protocols is examined.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
NUR 655. Prerequisites or corequisites:
NUR 601,
NUR 618,
NUR 620, and
NUR 647.
For graduate students only. This course provides the opportunity for the advanced practice nurse to understand and integrate health promotion and disease prevention concepts in a patient centered, culturally appropriate way. This includes principles of planning, implementation, and evaluation of evidenced based care to individuals, families, and communities.
Credit Hours: 3
For graduate students only. This course addresses the concepts that contribute to alterations in health status of clients throughout the life cycle. Concepts of focus include the cellular environment, altered tissue biology, and principles of genetics as they apply to health status, immunity and cellular proliferation.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Prerequisites or corequisites:
NUR 601
This practicum course provides the opportunity to apply knowledge and skills learned in the classroom in caring for adults in primary care settings. This practicum includes a minimum of 224 hours of supervised clinical practice in a variety of settings. Students may enroll in no more than one practicum courses in a single academic term.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Corequisites or
NUR 677
This practicum course provides the opportunity to apply knowledge and skills learned in the classroom in caring for the older adult in primary care settings. This practicum includes a minimum of 224 hours of supervised clinical practice in a variety of settings. Students may enroll in no more than one practicum courses in a single academic term.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Pre- or corequisite:
NUR 680.
This course emphasizes primary care management of common acute and chronic health problems of adult clients.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
NUR 618, 645 and 655.
This course prepares students in the management of normal and common health pattern variations pertaining to older adult health care in the primary care setting. It provides students with a theoretical base to assess, diagnose and manage the care of older adults across the lifespan. Emphasis is placed on collaborative management to achieve desired outcomes. Students will focus on promotion, maintenance and restoration of the older adult’s health patterns. Culturally competent, holistic, ethical, age and gender specific and risk stratified care will be discussed. Evidence based practice will be the basis for care management.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
NUR 618,
NUR 645 and
NUR 655.
This course prepares students in the management of normal and common health pattern variations pertaining to women’s health care in the primary care setting. It provides students with a theoretical base to assess, diagnose and manage the care of women across the lifespan. Emphasis is placed on collaborative management to achieve desired outcomes. Students will focus on promotion, maintenance and restoration of women’s health patterns. Culturally competent, holistic, ethical, age and gender specific including risk stratified care will be discussed. Evidence based practice will be the basis for care management.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
NUR 618 and
NUR 655. Pre- or corequisite:
NUR 645.
This practicum experience provides the opportunity to apply knowledge and skills learned in the classroom in caring for infants, children and adolescents in primary care settings. This practicum includes 224 hours of supervised clinical practice in a variety of settings. Students may enroll in no more than one practicum courses in a single academic term.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or corequisite:
NUR 687.
This practicum course provides the opportunity to apply knowledge and skills learned in the classroom in caring for women in primary care settings. This practicum includes a minimum of 224 hours of supervised clinical practice in a variety of settings. Students may enroll in no more than one practicum courses in a single academic term.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
Prerequisite or corequisite:
NUR 682.
This course emphasizes primary care management of common acute and chronic health problems of infants, children and adolescents.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
NUR 618, 645 and 655.
An in-depth study of a selected nursing topic of concern to students and faculty. Emphasis is on contemporary issues of global relevance affecting nursing and health care.
Credit Hours: 1-3
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor and department director.