Saga – Verle Waters – Part 1 - podcast episode cover

Saga – Verle Waters – Part 1

Dec 08, 20228 minSeason 2Ep. 42
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Episode description

This episode of the NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted Saga track is part one of two celebrating the life of Verle Waters. The podcast highlights Verle's significant contributions to nursing education, particularly her role in the associate degree nursing education revolution. Verle was instrumental in developing family-centered nursing courses and welcoming diverse students into the profession, changing the face of the nursing workforce. Despite facing backlash from diploma and baccalaureate programs, she persisted and helped establish over 600 ADN programs across the U.S. Verle's advocacy for ADN graduates and her efforts in nursing education reform shaped her career as a leading voice in the movement.

Dedicated to excellence in nursing, the National League for Nursing is the leading organization for nurse faculty and leaders in nursing education. Find past episodes of the NLN Nursing EDge podcast online. Get instant updates by following the NLN on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky, and YouTube. For more information, visit NLN.org.

Transcript

Welcome to Nursing EDge Unscripted Saga  as we use stories to connect the past to   the present and then our future as we  reimagine our teaching and learning.   As we celebrate the NLN Year of the Nurse Educator  we pay tribute to extraordinary nurses who've made   significant contributions to nursing education.  We dive into the stories of nurse educators   who recognized a need, challenged traditional  customs, and influenced transformative change.  

Throughout 2022 we have focused on the  contributions of educators and reformers   who significantly impacted the scholarship of  nursing education as part of the National League   for Nursing's Curriculum Revolution. They opened  the door to new ways to think about curriculum,   clinical judgment, the power dynamics inherent in  the student-teacher relationship, and theoretical  

underpinnings of clinical practice. This month  we celebrate another revolutionary, Verle Waters,   a national leader in associate degree nursing  education and a scholar whose deepest professional   commitment was to move the profession as a whole  forward. Verle valued personal connections and always   asked colleagues to call her by her first name. We  will honor that preference in this episode of Saga.  

Raised on a farm in Depression-era Minnesota,  Verle earned a Bachelor of Science from the   University of Minnesota in 1948 and a Masters  in Arts from Columbia Teachers College in New   York five years later, a remarkable pathway in the  early 1950s. For over a half a century from 1952   to her death in 2016, Verle led and contributed  to reform movements that reconceptualized entry   into practice, academic progression in nursing, and 

clinical instruction in pre-licensure programs. In   2007 she wrote about her 50-plus year remarkable  journey concluding, "Broadly speaking, there   were revolutionary changes in nursing education  and I had my turns at the barricades."   In 1952 while working as a public health nurse in  New York City, Verle joined her first revolution.  

She was asked by Dr. Mildred Montag to become a  full-time teacher in one of the seven initial   associate degree programs in the United States  at Orange County Community College in upstate New  

York. In her words

The teachers in the emerging junior college nursing program envisioned a program of learning that would revolutionize nursing education.

To use Verle's words

the curriculum no longer would  be based, "on a map of a hospital."   For example, Dr. Montag asked Verle to design and  implement the first family-centered nursing course   based on her population-based approach to nursing 

care delivery as a public health nurse. Together   with her pathfinder colleagues, Verle welcomed  students who looked differently from traditional   nursing students at that time - women and men who  were married with children, who held part-time jobs,   who embraced nursing as a second career and in  the process they changed the face of the nursing  

workforce. The faculty in the new two-year programs  confronted a backlash from leaders of diploma   programs and emerging baccalaureate programs  Yet they persisted and within 20 years over 600   ADN programs existed across the U.S., educating  almost 50 percent of the new nurse workforce.   Verle's engagement in the radical associate  degree program evolution shaped her career   identity as a reformer and for the next half  century she served as a leading voice of the  

movement. Verle chose to mount the barricades again  in the 1970s when the American Nurses Association   led a vigorous campaign to end the licensing  of the ADN graduate as a registered nurse.  

She told assembled audiences at numerous  national conferences and meetings that the   distinction between ADN and BSN education loses  precision and, "vaporizes as it drifts from   the teaching hospital in urban centers out through  the suburbs until, on reaching the 75-bed hospital   in a small town, it is a diffuse and foreign 

notion." For Verle, the realization   that the entry into practice wars, as she described  the era, focused on identifying difference, rather   than collaborating with practice to align with  models of care delivery, led to over 20 years of   estrangement and self-protected responses. Yet  she persisted and eventually RN-BSN pathways  

became the norm in nursing education. Always  gracious and known as a gifted and thoughtful   listener, Verle kept her toes, as she often said,  in both the often-volatile worlds of associate   degree nursing advancement and the broader  issues of practice and curriculum reform.   In part two of this episode, we  will explore her role in the NLN Curriculum Revolution as she continued her  journey to climb the barricades of reform.

And so the Saga continues and may our Saga  continue as we bring to a close this episode   of Nursing EDge Unscripted Saga. Thank you  for joining us

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