TTUHSC Welcomes its First Class of Nursing Students in Dallas/Fort Worth
The Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (TTUHSC) School of Nursing today (Feb. 10) welcomed its first class of 10 nursing students in Dallas/Fort Worth. In May 2013, the Texas Tech University System Board of Regents approved the establishment of a Web-based Second Degree Baccalaureate Nursing Degree Program for students in the Metroplex. Students began classes on Jan. 14.
“We are pleased to introduce this accelerated second degree BSN program to the DFW region,” said School of Nursing Dean Michael L. Evans, Ph.D., R.N., FAAN. “We also are pleased to be joining the other excellent nursing programs in the area to meet the current and future need to educate more students to become nurses. This program is aimed at attracting mid-career, degreed individuals who want to be a BSN registered nurse.”
The Second Degree Program is designed for students with a previous college degree. The accelerated 12-month program includes coach and nurse educator oversight in the student’s own communities in Abilene, Lubbock, Austin, El Paso, the Permian Basin and now Dallas/Fort Worth. Students in the Dallas program will gain on-site clinical experience at 25 Texas Health Resources hospitals.
“Together with our Center for Advancing Professional Practice we have been instrumental in creating a new learning culture for the profession of nursing through this innovative education affiliation with Texas Tech,” said Cole Edmonson, DNP, R.N., FACHE, NEA-BC, chief nursing officer at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas. “These students will have an opportunity for an immersion experience in a dedicated education unit designed to produce quality outcomes. Our goal is to make students an integral part of the care team and a sustainable part of the workforce to meet the triple aim, better care, improved outcomes at a lower cost."
Accelerated programs, like the School of Nursing’s Second Degree Program, offer the most efficient route to licensure as a registered nurse for people who have already completed a baccalaureate or graduate degree, according to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
The Institute of Medicine and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation have set a goal for 80 percent of the nation’s nurses to earn their bachelor’s degrees in nursing by 2020 to provide safe, quality, patient-centered, accessible and affordable care in the 21st century. Currently the national average of bachelor’s-prepared nurses is 50 percent. Texas stands below that average at 37 percent.
The School of Nursing plans to have 35 students in the Metroplex within two years.
For more breaking news and experts, follow @ttuhscnews on Twitter.
Related Stories
Molecular Pathology Preceptorship: Unmatched Value and Experience
Ericka Hendrix, PhD, MB(ASCP)CM, Program Director and Associate Professor in the Master of Science in Molecular Pathology program in the School of Health Professions spoke about the program’s preceptorship.
Moseley Named Permian Basin Regional Dean of the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Nursing
Kelly Moseley, DHSc, R.N., has been named the TTUHSC School of Nursing regional dean in the Permian Basin.
TTUHSC School of Nursing to Celebrate New YWCA Location
Community members in central Lubbock now have access to health care services and prenatal programs at one location inside the YWCA.
Recent Stories
TTUHSC and TTUHSC El Paso Named to National Academy of Inventors Top 100
For the third consecutive year in a row, the National Academy of Inventors (NAI) ranked the Texas Tech University System (TTU System) among the Top 100 U.S. Universities Granted Utility Patents for 2024. The TTU System, which includes Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (TTUHSC) and TTUHSC El Paso, ranked 75th.
TTUHSC Recognizes Student Research During Amarillo Research Symposium
More than 100 student and trainee researchers from the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (TTUHSC) presented research findings at the 2025 Student Research Day on April 11.
Scrolling into Stress: Expert Psychologist Provides Tips on How to Manage Stress
Natalie Scanlon, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist at Texas Tech Physicians, explains that the rapid rise of electronic use has resulted in detrimental effects on mental health.