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MN/MS Students: Program Description
Conceptual Framework of Graduate Education
The conceptual framework for graduate programs at the University of
Washington School of Nursing affirms the faculty's perspective on the
nature of nursing knowledge and its relationship to professional practice
and graduate education. The framework stems from a two-fold
source: a) the overall mission of the University of Washington to foster
the generation, dissemination, and utilization of systematic knowledge
garnered through scholarship and research; and b) the nursing profession's
mission to foster knowledge-based nursing services that promote, maintain,
and restore the well-being and health of individual human beings,
families, and populations in the community. The components of the
framework were chosen on the assumption that the discipline of nursing,
i.e., the body of systematic nursing knowledge, derives from a combination
of humanitarian and scientific perspectives on the meaning of health,
human nature, and caregiving as a social activity (Donaldson and Crowley,
1978; Ellis, 1983). Three concepts were identified as central to the
framework for graduate programs: a) professional foundations, b) nursing
science, and c) modes of systematic inquiry.
Professional Foundations
As a profession, nursing carries responsibility for providing a service in
keeping with societal needs for assistance with health care problems
involving individuals, groups, and communities. Professional foundations
as a domain of knowledge comes from inquiry into the nature of
professional nursing, the value-orientations of the profession, the nature
of clinical practice, historical influences on current practices and
delivery modes, and the philosophic underpinnings of both professional and
clinical practice (Donaldson and Crowley, 1978).
This area of nursing knowledge incorporates salient conceptualizations of
professional nursing including the American Nurses' Association's
(1981) definition of nursing as the diagnosis and treatment of human
responses to health problems. The concept of professional nursing
consists of the categories of direct and indirect services. The former is
concerned with goal-directed activities performed in relation to and
collaboration with the recipient of services (individual, group, or
community) to promote and maintain recovery, rehabilitation, and
well-being of the recipient. The latter refers to measures that support
and facilitate the delivery of direct services and includes but is not
limited to administration, coordination, supervision, instruction,
evaluation, and consultation.
Professional foundations incorporates different theoretical perspectives
on the central mission of nursing and its goals, methods, and desired
outcomes. It includes consideration of the relationship of salient values
to statements of nursing philosophy, the functions and limits of
professional codes of ethics as guidelines for practice, and the influence
of context on the nature of nursing problems. Conceptualizations on the
principles and nature of nursing practice include examination of the types
and nature of clinical problems, the nature of clinical interventions, and
ethical issues and problems to be considered.
Nursing Science
Professional services that assist individuals, groups, or populations
towards the achievement of health and health-directed behaviors need to be
based on scientific knowledge about the responses of human beings in
interaction with their life situations. Nursing science is defined as the
study of individual and group adaptations to health and illness in
relation to environments and therapeutic change. The functions of nursing
science are: a) to extend knowledge of the various circumstances,
therapeutic actions, and environments that influence and alter the health
of individuals, groups, and populations, and b) to incorporate knowledge
of theories that identify the conditions necessary and sufficient for the
promotion, maintenance, and restoration of health. Operationally the
faculty has conceptualized the substantive content of nursing science
within five fields study.
- Individual Adaptations to Wellness and Illness consists of
study of responses an
d/or behaviors of individuals in states of wellness and illness. Focus is
on identifying effective and noneffective means used by individuals for
promoting health, preventing disease and disability, fostering recovery
from illness and rehabilitation to optimal functioning.
- Family Adaptations to Wellness and Illness consists of study of
coping patterns of families in health and illness changes. Focus is on
small group adaptations to usual and ordinary transitions in living as
well as to critical changes produced by death, major illness, and other
unusual events.
- Environments: Supporting and Non-supporting is the study of
physical, biological, psychological, and sociocultural environments or
systems as complex multidimensional sets of forces and elements affecting
the development and maintenance of health and unhealthy states in human
beings. Particular attention is given to identifying the characteristics
of internal and external environments that promote, maintain, and support
states of health.
- *Clinical therapeutics: Interpersonal consists of the study of
social intervention and interpersonal actions which assist patients and
families in coping with physical, psychological, interpersonal, and social
effects of illness and in promoting health and health-related
behaviors. Focus is on the characteristics and outcomes of these
interventions and the psychosocial circumstances under which they take
place.
- *Clinical Therapeutics: Physical is the study of physical
interventions and therapeutics measures which assist patients and families
in reducing the physical effects of illness and in improving or promoting
health. Focus is on the mechanism of action of these interventions as
they affect underlying physiological and pathophysiological processes.
*Clinical Therapeutics: Interpersonal and Physical were combined as a
single field of study 1978.
The uniqueness of nursing science lies primarily in (a) the
conceptual orientation of the human being to his/her environment and
(b) the need for research design that includes and extends beyond
traditional laboratory and research settings. The scientific study of
human subjects in relation to their usual circumstances of living of
necessity must be conducted in a variety of settings and circumstances.
Modes of Systematic Inquiry
Because the knowledge comprising the discipline of nursing derives from
both humanitarian and scientific perspectives, its creation makes use of
several modes of systematic inquiry. In the case of nursing science the
predominant mode of inquiry is the scientific method toward the goal of
creating descriptive and predictive theories based on the study of
empirical phenomena. The knowledge defined as professional foundations
serves as the basis for action in professional and clinical practice and
derives from the use of other modes of systematic inquiry including but
not limited to philosophic, historical, and clinical methods. The
ultimate goal of these inquiries is the creation of prescriptive theories
having relevance for the meaning and implementation of direct and indirect
nursing services.
Goals of Graduate Education
As members of a professional school, the faculty carry dual responsibility
for preparing (a) practitioners whose focus is the use of nursing and
related knowledge for the delivery and evaluation of effective health care
services to individuals groups, and communities and (b) nurse scholars and
scientists whose focus is the generation and validation of new forms of
nursing knowledge. The conceptual framework highlights the need for two
kinds of graduate programs in nursing, one emphasizing education for
professional nursing practice and the other emphasizing education for
academic scholarship and research. Both types of graduate education are
built around the knowledge domains of professional foundations, nursing
science, and modes of systematic inquiry and draw on knowledge of related
fields. They differ in terms of outcome goals, substantive emphasis,
major modes of inquiry, and specific programs of study.
References
American Nurses' Association. Nursing, A Policy Statement. Kansas City,
Missouri: American Nurses' Association, 1981.
Sue K. Donaldson and Dorothy M. Crowley. The Discipline of
Nursing. Nursing Outlook, 26:112-120, 1978.
Rosemary Ellis, Philosophic Inquiry. H. Werley and J. Fitzpatrick (Eds.),
Annual Review of Nursing Research (Vol.1) New York: Spring Publishing
Company, 1983, pp. 211-228.
Approved by UW Seattle Graduate Faculty in 1986 (revised 2000) and by UW
Tacoma Faculty in 2000
Return to MN/MS Students: Program Description
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