University of Arkansas (The Eleanor Mann School of Nursing)
The Eleanor Mann School of Nursing offers both undergraduate and graduate nursing programs. By the time nursing students graduate, many have received three or four job offers. One hundred percent of Eleanor Mann School of Nursing graduates have found meaningful employment a year after graduation.
The Bachelor of Science in Nursing (B.S.N.) provides students with extensive knowledge and hands-on experience in a wide variety of settings, offers small clinical class sizes, low faculty-student ratios and tremendous one-on-one support from professors. The program emphasizes nurses' varied roles as caregivers, managers, teachers and researchers, and it prepares graduates to practice in the complex, highly sophisticated and exciting world of health care and provides a solid foundation for success in graduate schools and specialty certification.
The Master of Science in Nursing Online Clinical Program (M.S.N.) will prepare graduates to serve as clinical nurse specialists for adults with medical/surgical health problems. Clinical practicum courses require students to be in clinical settings three contact hours per week. The program is cohort-based and can be completed in 2 1/2 years as a full-time student or in 3 1/2 years as a part-time student. Students may begin either cohort in the fall semester of 2007.
VISION
The Eleanor Mann School of Nursing is a dynamic, student-centered school recognized as a leader in nursing education and research.
MISSION
The mission of the Eleanor Mann School of Nursing is to promote the health of society through education of professional nurses, research and service.
PHILOSOPHY
The Eleanor Mann School of Nursing, an established entity within the University of Arkansas, College of Education and Health Professions, subscribes to the philosophy and stated mission of the University of Arkansas on teaching, research and service. The school of nursing provides professional nursing education to meet expanding health care needs. In recognition of the interrelationship between teaching, research, service and the practice of nursing in the changing health care needs of society, the faculty aspires toward excellence in teaching, contributes to research in nursing, and promotes improved health care.
School name: University of Arkansas (The Eleanor Mann School of Nursing)
Address: 217 Ozark Hall
Zip & city: AR 72701 Fayetteville
Phone: (479) 575-3904
Web: http://nurs.uark.edu/index.htm
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