Dr.
Cathy Franklin-Griffin has been hired as dean of the planned Judge-McRae School
of Nursing at Mars Hill University. Franklin-Griffin is charged with
collaboratively designing and developing the nursing programs at the
university.
Current
plans call for an RN to BSN (registered nurse to bachelor of science in
nursing) program to begin at the university in May 2015, pending approval by
the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges.
Classes for the RN to BSN program will take place at the MHU Asheville Center,
on Airport Road.
The
university's pre-licensure undergraduate Bachelor of Nursing degree is
anticipated to begin in the fall of 2016, pending approval by the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges and the North
Carolina Board of Nursing. Classes for this program will take place on the Mars
Hill University campus.
Construction
is scheduled to begin on Ferguson Health Sciences Center
(the building which will house the program) in March 2015, with a planned
completion date of spring or summer 2016.
Franklin-Griffin
comes to Mars Hill from Winston-Salem State University, where she served as
regional coordinator, interim director, and assistant professor in the WSSU
nursing program. She served as member of the Nursing Curriculum Committee for
all nursing programs, as nursing representative on the WSSU Academic Standards
and Curriculum Committee and as a School of Health Sciences delegate to the
Faculty Senate. Prior to her employment at WSSU, Dr. Franklin-Griffin
worked across the United States and overseas, developed and implemented nursing
and health sciences programs, consulted with academic and non-profit
organizations, wrote successful grant proposals, served on the North Carolina
Board of Nursing, presented regionally and nationally, authored for
professional texts, and served in state and national leadership positions. She
has family roots in western North Carolina, however, and said that the personal
history makes the opportunity at Mars Hill an especially meaningful one for
her.
"To
be the dean for the Judge-McRae School of Nursing at Mars Hill University is
particularly special to me due to the university's Christian roots, its
reputation and its location, as well as the caliber of professionalism and
expertise found here. This is much more than a job or position to me – it is a
mission and a calling to apply education, experience, and passion to benefit
the region," she said.
The program at Mars Hill will
be designed to meet the needs of both future and practicing nurses in the area,
she said. As the educational requirements of healthcare providers move toward
BSN-prepared nurses, the program will support practicing nurses to retain their
careers. Further, the traditional pre-licensure BSN Program will help to fill
the current deficiency in health care providers in western North
Carolina.
While
nursing is traditionally a career training program, Franklin-Griffin said that
the MHU BSN program, consistent with the university's overall mission, will be
grounded in the liberal arts.
"The MHU programs will
be grounded in liberal arts and will focus on health promotion, community
engagement, cultural sensitivity and competence, ethical leadership, and
courageous advocacy," she said. According to Franklin-Griffin, such
an education will prepare students to be practicing nurses, designers of care,
members of a profession, or members of an interdisciplinary team, and it will
give them the foundation to obtain future education as desired.
Current
plans call for an RN to BSN (registered nurse to bachelor of science in
nursing) program to begin at Mars Hill University in May 2015, pending approval
by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges. The
university's pre-licensure undergraduate Bachelor of Nursing degree is
anticipated to begin in the fall of 2016, pending approval by the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges and the North Carolina
Board of Nursing.
Gile
is originally from southeast Missouri. She graduated with an English
Literature degree from Denison University. She spent five years working
in the administrative office of a public library before moving to the Asheville
area with her husband in 2012.
Since
relocating, Marlene has worked for an insurance pass-through company assisting
pharmacies across the US with submitting claims to Medicare and Medicaid, after
which she spent two years as an accountant for various films and TV before
joining the staff of Mars Hill University.
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