University General Course Catalog 2023-2024 ARCHIVED CATALOG: LINKS AND CONTENT ARE OUT OF DATE. CHECK WITH YOUR ADVISOR.
Nursing, B.S.N.
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The bachelor’s degree program is designed to provide the high school graduate with the opportunity to obtain a baccalaureate degree in nursing. The bachelor’s degree program is the basic preparation for professional nursing practice and leadership positions in nursing. After completing the program, the graduate is qualified for nursing positions in public health agencies, schools, hospitals and other health-care providers. Nursing school graduates may also earn commissioned status in the military services, as well as admission to graduate education. The bachelor’s degree program major is four semesters with admissions occurring both spring and fall semesters.
The baccalaureate degree program is approved by the Nevada State Board of Nursing and accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE).
http://www.unr.edu/nursing/degrees/bsn
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Student Learning Outcomes
Students will be able to:
- Integrate concepts from the arts and sciences in promoting health and managing complex nursing care situations.
- Apply leadership concepts, skills, and decision making in the provision, and oversight of nursing practice in a variety of settings.
- Translate principles of patient safety and quality improvement into the delivery of high quality of care.
- Appraise, critically summarize and translate current evidence into nursing practice.
- Integrate knowledge, processes, and skills from nursing science; information and patient care technologies; and communication tools to facilitate clinical decision-making, and the delivery of safe and effective nursing care.
- Describe the effects of health policy, economic, legal, political, and socio-cultural factors on the delivery of and advocacy for equitable health care.
- Demonstrate effective professional communication and collaboration to optimize health outcomes.
- Deliver and advocate for health promotion and disease prevention strategies at the individual, family, community and population levels.
- Demonstrate value-based, professional behaviors that integrate altruism, autonomy, integrity, social justice and respect for diversity and human dignity.
- Demonstrate critical thinking, clinical decision making, and psychomotor skills necessary for the delivery of competent, evidence-based, holistic, and compassionate care to patients across the life span.
Contact Information
Kimberly Baxter
Associate Dean of Undergraduate Programs
(775) 682 7145
kimbaxter@unr.edu
Marsha Holford
Program Officer and Advisor
(775) 682-7143
mholford@unr.edu
Transfer to the University of Nevada, Reno
Use the transfer agreement and the degree planner (available by clicking at the top right of this page) to build your plan for graduation with your advisor. Course substitutions not identified on the transfer agreement require UNR advisor approval.
If a major-to-major transfer agreement is not available for your transfer institution, please check the General Core agreement if available. If neither is available, access Transferology to assist in your planning.
Admission Requirements
The Orvis School of Nursing has a competitive application process and accepts 64 applicants twice a year, in the Fall and Spring semesters. The application is open in January and September, the semester preceding anticipated enrollment.
- The applicant must be officially admitted to the University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) as a declared degree-seeking student. Community Health Sciences, Public Health major recommended. Applicant must possess an NSHE ID number. Students who are not currently active or enrolled at the University of Nevada, Reno will need to reapply. UNR application fee may apply.
- In order for all official transcripts to be evaluated and to ensure applicants have met program prerequisites; new or transfer students must apply to the University of Nevada, Reno and have all official transcripts sent the semester prior to applying for the nursing major.
- The applicant must have submitted and finalized all transfer credits which appear on the student’s unofficial transcript report in My Nevada. All pre-requisite courses and in-progress courses must appear on the report. If you have taken or are taking courses from another school(s) you must have official transcripts sent to UNR Office of Admissions and Records. This will provide documentation and list the courses as in-progress. Once the courses are completed, you must submit an updated official transcript with grade/credits earned.
- The applicant must have no more than 13 pre-requisite credits in-progress at the time of application (including CO13). All prerequisite grades must be no lower than a “C”. Of the 13 credits in-progress, no more than 4 credits may be science credits (includes CHEM and BIOL lecture and lab courses not NUTR 223).
- Applicant must have at least a 3.0 GPA on the selected pre-nursing coursework.
- If English is not the applicant’s Native language, they will need to take the TSE or SPEAK test. A minimum score of 55 must be obtained for admission to the major. Scores must be submitted. Please contact the Intensive English Language Center at UNR to schedule your speak test.
- All applicants to the Orvis School of Nursing are required to take the Test of Essential Academic Skills (TEAS) exam. This exam is an assessment tool used to evaluate prospective students’ potential for success in a rigorous nursing program. Please see the OSN website for information and further instructions.
- Selection to the nursing major is accomplished by a rank order list of qualified applicants based on a point matrix. This matrix includes points for GPA for selected prerequisite courses, TEAS Exam scores, and OSN admission preferences, (see OSN website for additional information regarding admission selection criteria).
- After completion of selection to the nursing major, 64 students will be sent a letter of provisional acceptance. All selected students must attend a mandatory orientation and accept provisional admission to the nursing major. Admission is confirmed when all criteria have been verified (background check/drug screening, fit for duty documentation, immunizations, BLS certification, liability insurance coverage, and successful completion of all in-progress prerequisite work).
- Letters of non-acceptance will also be sent. Students may re-apply during future application periods.
Note: Applicants must complete or have met all UNR Silver Core General Education Curriculum requirements in addition to the nursing prerequisites before entering the nursing major. No grade below “C” in any course will be accepted as applicable to the nursing degree. Following admission to the nursing major and successful completion of the nursing major coursework students will receive a B.S.N.
Graduation Requirements
- Total Units | 120
- Cumulative GPA | 2.0
- University GPA | 2.0
- Major GPA | 2.0
- University Residency Requirement | 30 Upper-Division Units at UNR
- Major Residency Requirement | 15 Units of Major Requirements at UNR
- Upper-Division Requirement | 60 Upper-Division Units
I. Core General Education Requirements (25-28 units)
NOTE: Refer to the Core Curriculum chapter of this catalog for information regarding the “Core English and Math Completion Policy .”
Students in this major must meet all Core Objectives (CO1 through CO14). Courses satisfying Core Objectives are designated (e.g., CO9) in General Catalog curricula and course descriptions.
A. Composition & Communication; Critical Analysis & Use of Information (3-6 units) - CO1, CO3
B. Quantitative Reasoning (3 units minimum) - CO2
C. Physical & Natural Phenomena (7 units) - CO4, CO4L
D. Cultures, Societies, & Individuals (3 units) - CO6
E. Artistic Composition, Interpretation, & Expression (3 units) - CO7
Refer to the Core Curriculum chapter for a list of approved CO7 courses .
F. History & Culture; Constitution (6 units) - CO5, CO8
Refer to the Core Curriculum chapter in this catalog.
II. Additional Core Requirements (6 units maximum)
Students must take courses that satisfy the following Core Objectives. Some or all of these Core Objectives may be satisfied in the Major Requirements (Section IV). Refer to the Core Curriculum chapter in this catalog.
A. Science, Technology & Society - CO9
B. Diversity & Equity - CO10
C. Global Context - CO11
Refer to the Core Curriculum chapter for a list of approved CO11 courses .
E. Capstone Integration & Synthesis - CO13
Refer to the Core Curriculum chapter for a list of approved CO13 courses .
III. Additional College Requirements (30-31 units)
Nursing Prerequisite Requirements
A. Choose one of the following (3 units)
B. Complete all of the following (22 units)
C. Choose one of the following (3-4 units)
D. Foundations of Nursing (2 units)
Complete the following:
IV. Major Requirements (56 units)
V. Minor Requirements (0 units)
VI. Electives (0-3 units)
To meet University upper division or credits from a 4-year institution requirement.
VII. Recommended Schedule
Nursing students are admitted to the major both fall and spring semesters and are enrolled during fall, spring, and summer terms. Many of the courses below have prerequisites that are not listed below. Prerequisites courses may count toward General Electives.
Fall Semester (15-16 units)
- Prerequisite Core English (3 units)
- Quantitative Reasoning (3 units) CO2
- Cultures, Societies, & Individuals (3 units) CO6
- Artistic Composition, Interpretation, & Expression (3 units) CO7
- General Electives (3-4 units) ( or recommended for CHS-PH majors)
Spring Semester (13-16 units)
Fall Semester (13-16 units)
Spring Semester (14-17 units)
Spring Semester (16 units)
Summer Semester (14 units)
Spring Semester (13 units)
Additional Information
Please refer to Orvis School of Nursing website at http://www.unr.edu/nursing for detailed information and requirements. |
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