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Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board

Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. Strategies to Increase the Number of Initial Licensure Registered Nurses and Nursing Faculty. January 29, 2009. Levels of Nursing Education. Diploma, ADN, BSN (92% of all nurses) - produce a generalist, “initial licensure” Master’s level (7%)

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Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board

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  1. Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board Strategies to Increase the Number of Initial Licensure Registered Nurses and Nursing Faculty January 29, 2009

  2. Levels of Nursing Education • Diploma, ADN, BSN (92% of all nurses) - produce a generalist, “initial licensure” • Master’s level (7%) - produce a specialist (e.g. APN, educator) • Doctoral level (less than 1%) - produce a researcher/educator (Ph.D.) and an advanced specialist (DNP)

  3. Texas will need to dramatically increase the number of ADN, BSN graduates by 2020

  4. Challenges for ADN, BSN Programs • Establishing new faculty positions and replacing retiring faculty • Increasing graduation rates of nursing students (currently 69% statewide) • Sustaining increases in new graduates from one year to the next

  5. MSN-nurse educator graduates represent 9.5% of all master’s level graduates

  6. In 2008, first-year DNP enrollments exceeded first-year Ph.D. enrollments

  7. Recommendations • Produce more ADN and BSN graduates - set institutional targets for number of graduates - create financial incentives for improving graduation rates • Produce more nursing faculty - fund existing loan repayment program - increase funding and pay stipends for future nurse educators through existing Professional Nursing Shortage Reduction Program

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