Nursing - Doctor of Nursing Practice

Postgraduate

In Los Angeles (USA)

higher than £ 9000

Description

  • Type

    Postgraduate

  • Location

    Los angeles (USA)

The School of Nursing offers the Master of Science in Nursing (M.S.N.) degree, the Doctor of Nursing Practice (D.N.P.) degree, the Master of Science (M.S.) degree, and the Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in Nursing.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Los Angeles (USA)
See map
90095

Start date

On request

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Subjects

  • Doctor
  • Nursing Practice
  • Project
  • University
  • Presentation

Course programme

61 units (16 separate courses) are required for the DNP program. These units/courses include both didactic and clinical residency hours. Required course work for the DNP degree program satisfies the requirements for the American Association of Colleges of Nursing and is shown below.

Core courses for the DNP program include the following:

Field Experience

Students are required to complete 60 hours as part of their Education Practicum for the DNP in Nursing 496A and 496B.

Field Experience: In Nursing 496A, students will identify a patient need in a specific population and develop an educational presentation aimed towards patients. In Nursing 496B, students will identify a staff need in a specific population and develop and educational presentation aimed towards institutional staff.

Teaching Experience

Not required.

Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations

Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass university written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations, the University Oral Qualifying Examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to university requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.

All committee nominations and reconstitutions adhere to the Minimum Standards for Doctoral Committee Constitution.

Written Qualifying Examination. The written qualifying examination must be submitted in the summer of the first year after completion of the DNP core courses. The written examination will be read by three DNP faculty members and graded as “pass” or “no pass”. Only one reexamination is permitted and it must be completed during the summer of the same year as the original examination.

Oral Qualifying Examination. The University Oral Qualifying Examination, taken after completing the course requirements and successfully passing the written qualifying examination, evaluates the student’s DNP Scholarly Project proposal.

The initial step is selection of a doctoral committee from the DNP faculty. Students are responsible for obtaining the consent of four faculty members to serve on the committee. Qualifications of members must be consistent with the student’s area of research and special interests and with the requirements for doctoral committees as stated in the Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA. Additional members, including those from an institution or clinical agency representing the student's clinical and research interests who meet the requirements for committee membership as stated in the Minimum Standards for Doctoral Committees, will be considered for additional membership on the DNP Scholarly Committee. The program director must give approval of members consenting to serve on the doctoral committee before the committee is submitted for the approval of the Graduate Division.

Advancement to Candidacy

Students are advanced to candidacy upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations. Successful completion of the DNP Scholarly Project course series will be necessary in order for the student to plan, implement and evaluate the DNP Scholarly Project. Each member of the committee reports the examination as “passed” or “not passed;” a student may not be advanced to candidacy if more than one member votes “not passed” regardless of the size of the committee as stated in the Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.

Doctor of Nursing Practice Scholarly Project

A DNP Scholarly Project is required for this professional degree program. Students will complete a DNP Residency, DNP Scholarly Proposal, and implementation of this project will take place at the appropriate institution. The DNP Scholarly Project will require students to demonstrate a synthesis of evidence-based practice in a practice area specific to the student’s specialty.

The DNP Scholarly Project requires a synthesis of leadership, policy, quality, management, and clinical learning experience. Each student will collaborate with an agency (ideally their current clinical setting) to address a real-world problem or health issue. The DNP Scholarly Project reflects doctoral preparation in the translation of research and science to improve patient or population outcomes. Evaluation of the effectiveness of the DNP Scholarly Project takes place in the final quarter of study and is presented to the student’s committee in the form of a final oral examination/defense.

Final Oral Examination (DNP Scholarly Project Presentation)

A final oral defense of the project is required of all DNP students. The entire committee must be in attendance and each member must record a decision of “passed” or “not passed”. A student is not considered to have passed the final oral examination with more than one “not passed” vote, regardless of the size of the committee. The final oral defense will follow the guidelines as stated in the Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.

Time-to-degree

The normative time from matriculation to degree is seven quarters (21 months) for the DNP degree. From admission to advancement to candidacy (completion of DNP Scholarly Project Proposal), the normative time is five quarters. The maximum time for degree completion is 11 quarters, or three (3) years.

MAXIMUM TTD

Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination

University Policy

A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.0) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.

Special Departmental or Program Policy

In addition to the standard reasons outlined above, a student may be specifically recommended for academic disqualification for failure of a second attempt of the written or oral qualifying examinations.

UCLA is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges and by numerous special agencies. Information regarding the University's accreditation may be obtained from the Office of Academic Planning and Budget, 2107 Murphy Hall.

Nursing - Doctor of Nursing Practice

higher than £ 9000