Abstract

Session presented on Saturday, November 7, 2015 and Sunday, November 8, 2015:

To meet the challenges in higher education and healthcare, nursing education needs leaders who are dedicated to providing quality education, finding creative solutions, and working collaboratively with multidisciplinary teams. The purpose of Sigma Theta Tau International's Nurse Faculty Leadership Academy (NFLA), sponsored by Elsevier, is to mentor junior nursing faculty to promote leadership development and individual career success in addition to supporting nursing academia through faculty retention and fostering productive work environments. Methods: The NFLA uses the Triad relationship between the Scholar, Leadership Mentor, and Faculty Advisor to meet the purpose of the academy. Through the Triad relationship, this Scholar, participated in the 18-month leadership program by completing an individual leadership plan, leading a team project, and expanding her personal scope of influence. Results: The individual leadership plan, based upon Kouzes and Posner's leadership model, specifically focused on promoting the scholar's leadership in her academic environment and reflecting on her leadership practices and experiences. From this plan, the scholar engaged in leadership activities at her institution such as mentoring a new faculty member, leading committees at the school level related to quality improvement and program accreditation, serving as the keynote speaker at school and college level functions, and representing the school on a university level committee. The team leadership project focused on creating a comprehensive evaluation plan to support the development and evaluation of BSN nursing student progression toward safe nursing practice in regard to targeted student outcomes identified from the AACN's (2008) Baccalaureate Essentials. The team developed a curriculum assessment template to serve as a guide to identify gaps in the curriculum, map out where in the curriculum the student outcomes were being taught, and identify how those outcomes were evaluated. The outcome evaluation included the specific assessment method and level of Bloom's cognitive taxonomy. During the NFLA, the scholar's scope of influence increased in the school of nursing and at the college level: this can be seen through increased recognition for her expertise by school and college administration. Examples include being asked to participate in curriculum development at the school level and to teach a multidisciplinary course with students from nursing, pharmacy, public health, and dietetics at the college level. Conclusions: The NFLA experience allowed one junior faculty member to be mentored by leaders in nursing education to promote her personal leadership and career development.

Author Details

Erin E. Killingsworth, RN; Carol Winters, PhD, RN, CNE; Marilyn Oermann, FAAN

Sigma Membership

Gamma Eta

Type

Poster

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Nurse Faculty Leadership Academy, Leadership Development, Mentoring

Conference Name

43rd Biennial Convention

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

Conference Year

2015

Rights Holder

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All permission requests should be directed accordingly and not to the Sigma Repository.

All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.

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Proxy-submission

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Promoting leadership: The NFLA experience

Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

Session presented on Saturday, November 7, 2015 and Sunday, November 8, 2015:

To meet the challenges in higher education and healthcare, nursing education needs leaders who are dedicated to providing quality education, finding creative solutions, and working collaboratively with multidisciplinary teams. The purpose of Sigma Theta Tau International's Nurse Faculty Leadership Academy (NFLA), sponsored by Elsevier, is to mentor junior nursing faculty to promote leadership development and individual career success in addition to supporting nursing academia through faculty retention and fostering productive work environments. Methods: The NFLA uses the Triad relationship between the Scholar, Leadership Mentor, and Faculty Advisor to meet the purpose of the academy. Through the Triad relationship, this Scholar, participated in the 18-month leadership program by completing an individual leadership plan, leading a team project, and expanding her personal scope of influence. Results: The individual leadership plan, based upon Kouzes and Posner's leadership model, specifically focused on promoting the scholar's leadership in her academic environment and reflecting on her leadership practices and experiences. From this plan, the scholar engaged in leadership activities at her institution such as mentoring a new faculty member, leading committees at the school level related to quality improvement and program accreditation, serving as the keynote speaker at school and college level functions, and representing the school on a university level committee. The team leadership project focused on creating a comprehensive evaluation plan to support the development and evaluation of BSN nursing student progression toward safe nursing practice in regard to targeted student outcomes identified from the AACN's (2008) Baccalaureate Essentials. The team developed a curriculum assessment template to serve as a guide to identify gaps in the curriculum, map out where in the curriculum the student outcomes were being taught, and identify how those outcomes were evaluated. The outcome evaluation included the specific assessment method and level of Bloom's cognitive taxonomy. During the NFLA, the scholar's scope of influence increased in the school of nursing and at the college level: this can be seen through increased recognition for her expertise by school and college administration. Examples include being asked to participate in curriculum development at the school level and to teach a multidisciplinary course with students from nursing, pharmacy, public health, and dietetics at the college level. Conclusions: The NFLA experience allowed one junior faculty member to be mentored by leaders in nursing education to promote her personal leadership and career development.