Confronting the Social Mandate for Nursing Scholarship – One School of Nursing’s Journey
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17483/2368-6669.1018Abstract
The move to advance the qualification of nurses has necessitated the expansion of baccalaureate degree level nursing education to colleges and other less research-intensive post-secondary institutions in Canada and beyond. Shifts in the post-secondary institutional contexts of nursing education necessitate a re-thinking of the mandate and purpose of scholarship in nursing and how it can be sustained. Over a span of forty years, Thompson Rivers University School of Nursing has evolved from a community college program to one situated in a university college, and most recently within a new university. In this paper, we describe the purpose and process of developing our faculty scholarship within these distinct institutional forms. We offer our retrospective and perspective on how faculty in different types of institutions must contribute to the research mandate of the discipline of nursing and bring renewed strengths to other forms of scholarship required to advance the profession in the 21st century. We also describe how scholarship as a way of being is integral to sustaining quality academic environments for nursing education. This reflection adds to the growing literature describing challenges of renewal, resources, and relevance within nursing education around the world. A deeper understanding and examination of these challenges brings the promise of strategic direction in policy arenas for the sustainability of the professoriate and its capacity for both educating the nursing workforce and developing the discipline.
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Copyright (c) 2014 Susan M. Duncan, Star Mahara, Victoria Holmes (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.