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Nursing Major (B.S.)
The Nursing major at UNH provides comprehensive educationin patient care, health promotion, and disease prevention. You will engage in direct clinical experiences and research opportunities to excel in diverse healthcare settings. Our program emphasizes evidence-based practices, critical thinking, and patient-centered care. Supported by experienced faculty and a strong nursing community, you'll be ready to excel in various nursing roles or pursue advanced studies.
What is nursing?
Nursing is a high-demand field at the front lines of healthcare. Nurses use clinical judgement and decision-making skills to determine patient, family and community needs, and provide evidence-based treatment and healthcare guidance. UNH nursing graduates become part of the workforce that is helping to shape the future of healthcare. A nursing degree will prepare you for work in a wide range of areas, including emergency and critical care, family practice, school nurse, assisted living settings and a vast array of hospital and rehabilitation settings.
Why study nursing at UNH?
In the nursing degree program at UNH, you’ll learn from faculty who serve as facilitators and mentors within a supportive, scholarly environment. You’ll develop high quality clinical and problem-solving skills in our innovative nursing lab, which includes mannequins, task trainers and equipment to simulate clinical situations. You’ll also gain valuable hands-on experience through opportunities to participate in research at home and abroad, clinical experiences offered at area hospitals and community health agencies, and internships. The undergraduate nursing program is nationally accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education.
Potential careers
- Clinical nurse (critical care, pediatrics, oncology, home care, school nursing)
- Community health nurse
- Home healthcare specialist
- Nurse case manager
- Nurse educator
- Nurse-midwife
- Nurse practitioner
- Nursing and healthcare administration
- Researcher in practice, education, service or industry
Contact
Wendy Kaban
Department Coordinator
Email: Wendy.Kaban@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-2299
Office: Nursing, Hewitt Hall Rm 275, Durham, NH 03824
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Curriculum & Requirements
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The nursing program faculty believe learning is a creative process wherein students are active participants in their education, growth, and development as professional nurses. Faculty members are facilitators and mentors to students within a supportive, scholarly environment.
The curricula are divided into biological, social sciences, and humanities as a foundation for courses in the major, and nursing courses, which emphasize relationship-based care, reflective thinking, clinical decision making, and the application of evidence-based guidelines to develop quality and safe clinical skills. Clinical experiences are offered in area health facilities, community health agencies, and a state-of-the-art simulation laboratory. The senior year culminates in a capstone practicum in which students apply curricular concepts in a precepted clinical experience.
A grade of C or better in high school chemistry is required, as well as biology or physics.
Students are responsible for their own transportation to clinical agencies, uniforms, professional equipment, health insurance coverage, yearly criminal background checks, drug screening, fingerprinting, yearly health assessment, and select immunizations and titers. Students must maintain certification in cardiopulmonary resuscitation at the American Heart Association Basic Life Support for Healthcare Professionals level. All clinical documents must be received by July 1st before the sophom*ore year, except flu vaccine, which is due by October 15th, and remain up to date until graduation. Clinical documents cannot expire during the academic year; documents that must be submitted yearly must be dated between May 1 and June 30. Students will be assessed a late fee if clinical documents are not received by the due date. Students will be dropped from nursing courses if documentation is not received by the first day of class. Additional costs associated with the program include, but are not limited to, simulation laboratory fees, fees associated with program requirements, and attendance at professional meetings.
Honors-in-Major Program
The Honors-in-Major Program is offered to interested junior nursing students who achieve the required minimum cumulative GPA and minimum GPA in NURS courses at the end of the sophom*ore year in nursing and/or junior nursing students who are members of the University Honors Program. See Requirements tab for courses and more information.
Degree Plan
First Year | ||
---|---|---|
Fall | Credits | |
BMS507 | Human Anatomy and Physiology I | 4 |
ENGL401 | First-Year Writing | 4 |
HHS401 | College of Health and Human Services Seminar | 1 |
NURS500 | Introduction to Professional Nursing 1 | 2 |
Statistics 3 | 4 | |
Discovery/Inquiry | 4 | |
Credits | 19 | |
Spring | ||
BMS508 | Human Anatomy and Physiology II | 4 |
PSYC401 | Introduction to Psychology | 4 |
NURS501 | Research for Nursing Professionals | 4 |
Discovery/Inquiry | 4 | |
Credits | 16 | |
Second Year | ||
Fall | ||
BMS501 | Microbes in Human Disease | 4 |
NURS504 | Disease and Drugs I | 4 |
NURS516 | Health Assessment and Nursing Fundamentals (plus lab) | 4 |
NURS516C | Health Assessment and Nursing Fundamentals Clinical | 2 |
Discovery | 4 | |
Credits | 18 | |
Spring | ||
NURS505 | Diseases and Drugs II | 4 |
NURS506 | Human Development, Interaction and Learning Across the Lifespan | 4 |
NURS517C | Clinical Integration (plus lab) | 2 |
NURS601 | Function and Wellbeing of Older Adults | 2 |
Discovery/Elective | 4 | |
Credits | 16 | |
Third Year | ||
Fall | ||
NURS611 | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness I (plus lab) | 4 |
NURS611C | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness I Clinical | 2 |
NURS616 | Living with Mental Illness 2 | 2 |
NURS616C | Living with Mental Illness Clinical | 2 |
NURS627 | Clinical Judgment in Nursing | 4 |
Credits | 14 | |
Spring | ||
NURS612 | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness II (plus lab) | 4 |
NURS612C | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness II Clinical | 2 |
NURS621 | Maternal and Newborn Nursing (plus lab) 2 | 2 |
NURS621C | Maternal Newborn Nurs Clin | 2 |
Discovery/Elective | 4 | |
Discovery/Elective | 4 | |
Credits | 18 | |
Fourth Year | ||
Fall | ||
NURS702 | Child Health Nursing | 2 |
NURS702C | Child Health in the Community Clinical | 2 |
NURS704 | Public Health Nursing | 4 |
NURS704P | Public Health Nursing Project | 2 |
NURS711 | Clinical Judgment in Complex Illness (plus lab) | 2 |
Discovery/Elective | 4 | |
Credits | 16 | |
Spring | ||
NURS705 | Contemporary Leadership within Health Care Systems | 4 |
NURS721 | Integrating Professional Nursing Practice | 2 |
NURS721C | Integrating Professional Nursing Practice Clinical | 6 |
Credits | 12 | |
Total Credits | 129 |
- 1
May be taken fall or spring semester
- 2
May be taken fall or spring semester.
- 3
PSYC 402 Statistics in Psychology, SOC402 Statistics, MATH439 Statistical Discovery for Everyone, HHS 540 Statistics for Health and Human Service Professionals
- 4
May be taken fall or spring semester
Degree Requirements
Minimum Credit Requirement: 128 credits
Minimum Residency Requirement: 32 credits must be taken at UNH
Minimum GPA: 2.0 required for conferral*
Core Curriculum Required: Discovery & Writing Program Requirements
Foreign Language Requirement: No
All Major, Option and Elective Requirements as indicated.
*Major GPA requirements as indicated.
Major Requirements
Candidates for the nursing degree must satisfy all of the University Discovery Program requirements in addition to satisfying major requirements. Discovery courses listed below require a C or better in the major.
Prerequisite courses require grades of C or better and only one prerequisite course may be repeated one time in order to progress. Most of the prerequisite courses also meet Discovery requirements. Major courses require a minimum grade of C. Nursing courses may not be repeated. A cumulative grade-point average of 2.5 must be maintained throughout the program.
A course in statistics (HHS540, PSYC402, SOC402, MATH439) must be completed prior to, or taken concurrent with, nursing research. The statistics course requires a C or better in the major.
Clinical Hours: 814*
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Discovery Program Courses | ||
ENGL401 | First-Year Writing | 4 |
BMS507 &BMS508 | Human Anatomy and Physiology I and Human Anatomy and Physiology II | 8 |
PSYC401 | Introduction to Psychology | 4 |
BMS501 | Microbes in Human Disease | 4 |
Total Credits | 20 |
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Required Nursing Courses | ||
NURS500 | Introduction to Professional Nursing | 2 |
NURS501 | Research for Nursing Professionals | 4 |
NURS504 | Disease and Drugs I | 4 |
NURS505 | Diseases and Drugs II | 4 |
NURS506 | Human Development, Interaction and Learning Across the Lifespan | 4 |
NURS516 | Health Assessment and Nursing Fundamentals | 4 |
NURS516C | Health Assessment and Nursing Fundamentals Clinical | 2 |
NURS517C | Clinical Integration | 2 |
NURS601 | Function and Wellbeing of Older Adults | 2 |
NURS611 | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness I | 4 |
NURS611C | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness I Clinical | 2 |
NURS612 | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness II | 4 |
NURS612C | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness II Clinical | 2 |
NURS616 | Living with Mental Illness | 2 |
NURS616C | Living with Mental Illness Clinical | 2 |
NURS621 | Maternal and Newborn Nursing | 2 |
NURS621C | Maternal Newborn Nurs Clin | 2 |
NURS627 | Clinical Judgment in Nursing | 4 |
NURS702 | Child Health Nursing | 2 |
NURS702C | Child Health in the Community Clinical | 2 |
NURS704 | Public Health Nursing | 4 |
NURS704P | Public Health Nursing Project | 2 |
NURS705 | Contemporary Leadership within Health Care Systems | 4 |
NURS711 | Clinical Judgment in Complex Illness | 2 |
NURS721 | Integrating Professional Nursing Practice | 2 |
NURS721C | Integrating Professional Nursing Practice Clinical | 6 |
- *
Clinical hours are completed through the following required courses: NURS516C, NURS517C, NURS611C, NURS612C, NURS616C, NURS621C, NURS702C, NURS721C.
Honors-in-Major Program
The Honors-in-Major Program is offered to interested junior nursing students who achieve a minimum grade-point average of 3.75 in NURS courses and cumulative GPA of 3.4 at the end of the sophom*ore year in nursing and/or junior nursing students who are members of the University Honors Program. A total of 18 credits taken at the honors level is required for the Honors-in-Major Program. Orientation to the Honors-in-Major Program is held at the beginning of the junior nursing year.Students must successfully complete with a grade of B or better 8 additional credits of honors coursework drawn from the following courses:
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Select two courses from the following: | ||
NURS612 | Care of the Adult with Acute Illness II | 4 |
NURS627 | Clinical Judgment in Nursing | 4 |
NURS704 | Public Health Nursing | 4 |
NURS705 | Contemporary Leadership within Health Care Systems | 4 |
Honors-in-major students must also successfully complete with a grade of B or better:
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
NURS648W | Nursing Honors Seminar I | 1-4 |
NURS748W | Nursing Honors Thesis I | 1 |
NURS749W | Nursing Honors Thesis II | 4 |
These self-directed learning experiences, related to the student's interests, are designed to help students acquire advanced knowledge and skills to undertake inquiry or scholarly projects. Students must submit a project description to a faculty adviser at the beginning of the senior year. Students present the results of this study at the Nursing Inquiry Day.
The undergraduate student is prepared to:
- Synthesize core knowledge from the liberal arts, sciences, and nursing as the foundation of professional practice.
- Integrate knowledge and skills to assess, design, implement, and evaluate nursing care in a safe, compassionate, culturally sensitive, evidence-based manner.
- Engage clients, families, and communities in collaborative decision-making incorporating evidence-based knowledge and anticipatory guidance.
- Employ team leadership and collaborative skills with other health professionals to optimize client and system outcomes.
- Recognize the influence of complex health systems on health care practice and advocate for policies that promote a socially just, patient centered healthcare system.
- Engage in scholarly inquiry to identify, evaluate and integrate the best current practice.
- Integrates health promotion, clinical prevention strategies when providing care at the individual or population level.
- Incorporates principles of patient safety and risk mitigation when using healthcare technology and therapeutics in the provision of care.
- Uses effective written, verbal, and nonverbal communication strategies when engaged in professional practice.
- Embrace professional values embodied in the ANA code of ethics.
Explore Program Details
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Marcy Ainslie
Assistant Professor
Email: Marcy.Ainslie@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-1261
Samantha Arnold
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Samantha.Arnold@unh.edu
Rhonda Board
Interim Director of Nursing
Email: Rhonda.Board@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-2710
Research Interests
Angela Braswell
CLINICAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Email: Angela.Braswell@unh.edu
Research Interests
Courtney Coffey
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Courtney.Coffey@unh.edu
Cathleen Colleran
Clinical Associate Professor
Director of DNP Program
Email: Cathleen.Colleran@unh.edu
Research Interests
Marcy Doyle
Research Assistant Professor
Clinical and Quality Improvement Director
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Marcy.Doyle@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 513-5288
Elizabeth Evans
CLINICAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Email: Elizabeth.Evans@unh.edu
Lauryn Frost
CLINICAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Email: Lauryn.Frost@unh.edu
Gene Harkless
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
Email: Gene.Harkless@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-2285
Elizabeth Harrison
CLINICAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Email: Elizabeth.Harrison@unh.edu
Eileen Hollis
CLINICAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Email: Eileen.Hollis@unh.edu
Pamela Kallmerten
Clinical Professor
Direct Entry Master's In Nursing (DEMN), Clinical Nurse Leader and Evidence-Based Nursing Program Director
Email: Pamela.Kallmerten@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-1123
Research Interests
Kaitlynn Liset
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Kaitlynn.Liset@unh.edu
Gibran Mancus
Assistant Professor
Email: Gibran.Mancus@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-3207
Research Interests
Anne Meginniss
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Anne.meginniss@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-2084
Research Interests
Clarissa Michalak
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Clarissa.Michalak@unh.edu
Karen Niland
Principal Lecturer
Email: Karen.Niland@unh.edu
Research Interests
Kerry Nolte
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
Chair, Nursing Department
Email: Kerry.Nolte@unh.edu
Alyssa O'Brien
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
Email: Alyssa.OBrien@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-2260
Research Interests
April Phelps
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: April.Phelps@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-3192
Maria Romanoff Rand
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Maria.RomanoffRand@unh.edu
Dayle Sharp
CLINICAL PROFESSOR
Email: Dayle.Sharp@unh.edu
Research Interests
Deborah Simonton
CLINICAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Email: Deborah.Simonton@unh.edu
Emily Spenski
Clinical Assistant Professor
Email: Emily.Spenski@unh.edu
Research Interests
Jing Wang
Assistant Professor
Email: Jing.Wang1@unh.edu
Phone: (603) 862-3210
Research Interests
After May 1st and before July 1st sophom*ores, juniors, and seniors must submit required documents as instructed in the Department of Nursing. Expiration dates cannot occur during the academic year.
If documentation is received after July 1st and up to August 1st, the student will be required to pay a late fee of $100. If documentation is received after August 1st and up to August 15th, the student will be required to pay asecondlate fee of $100. If documentation is not received by August 15th, the student will be required to drop all nursing courses and cannot participate in any clinical hours. If a student subsequently submits all required documentation, the student will be required to pay the July 1 and August 1 late fees.
- Submit Department of Nursing clinical documentation form with positive titre for mumps, measles, rubella and chicken pox signed by primary care provider;
- Proof of Tdap immunization within the last ten years; if Tdap is older than ten years, submit proof of Tdap and Td booster;
- Proof of positive Hepatitis B titre. IfHepatitis B titre is negative, the student must repeat series and submit written documentation. If a student is in the process of receiving the series and cannot demonstrate a positive HBV, a letter from healthcare provider must be submitted as above by July 1.
- Proof of 2-step PPD results done yearly and if positive PPD, one chest X-ray with written documentation of no active disease yearly. Students who have had the BCG vaccine or who are allergic to the PPD test, may arrange with their PCP for a qualified lab to administer the QuantiFERON-TB Gold Test (QFT-G). It is not available in all areas. A two-step PPD may be required.
- Flu vaccine documentation by October 15 yearly;
- Proof of physical exam within 12 months of first day of class and yearly thereafter;
- CPR through the American Heart Association at the Basic Life Support Provider level only;
- Criminal background report via approved, online agency and New Hampshire State Police, regardless of residency;
- Submit Bureau of Elderly and Adult Services State Registry Consent Form (BEAS);
- NHCCP training between August 1 and August 15 yearly which includes education on blood borne pathogens; and
- Drug and alcohol testing by approved vendor on assigned date and time; random testing thereafter; and further testing, if there is reasonable suspicion or the student is unable to supply testable sample, at the student's expense.
Student Organizations
STTI Honor Society
Clinical Practicum
Nursing Tours/Shadow a Nursing Student
Technical/Physical Standards
Nursing Program Outcomes
Standards have been established to provide guidance to students as to skills and abilities required to function successfully in the program and ultimately in the profession of nursing. Each student must be able to meet the technical standards of performance necessary for the practice of nursing for admission and progression in the program of study. Students must be able to meet the following technical standards with or without a reasonable accommodation.
- Ability to assess patient needs and to understand instructions, emergency signals and telephone conversation.
- Ability to observe patients, manipulate equipment, and interpret data. Ability to ensure a safe environment, identify color changes, read fine print/writing and calculate fine calibrations.
- Ability to express and exchange information and ideas and to interact with patients, family, physicians, peers and other ancillary medical personnel.
- Ability to practice with frequent interruptions, to respond appropriately in an emergency or unexpected situation, and to successfully adapt to extreme variations in workload and stress levels.
- Ability to perform the following physical activities: handling, lifting, and operating equipment frequently moving, lifting, and transferring patients; and performing CPR.
Students interested in our Nursing major may also be interested in these advanced degree offerings:
- Nursing: Adult Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner - Online (M.S.)
- Nursing - Online (D.N.P.)
- Nursing: Clinical Nurse Leader - Online (M.S.)
- Nursing: Evidence Based Practice - Online (M.S.)
- Nursing: Primary Care Family Nurse Practitioner - Online (D.N.P.)
- Nursing: Adult-Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner - Online (D.N.P.)
- Nursing: Clinical Nurse Leader - Online (D.N.P.)
- Nursing: Direct Entry (M.S.)
- Nursing: Family Nurse Practitioner (M.S.)
- Nursing: Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (D.N.P.)
More To Explore
- Careers
- Honors in Major
- Research
- Scholarships
- Study Abroad