Robbie McCauley, Associate Dean of the Graduate Programs, Director of the Doctorate of Nursing program and Assistant Professor
Health & Life Science Building, Office 158, (540)-665-7267
The DNP program is designed to prepare clinical nurses with advanced knowledge, skills, values, meanings and experiences necessary to manage health care in a safe, effective and efficient manner and in a variety of settings.
The School of Nursing offers the Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) at two levels: BSN to DNP and Post Graduate DNP
Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Outcomes
Graduates will be able to:
- Synthesize knowledge associated with expert advanced nursing practice and the advancement of the profession.
- Demonstrate expert skill in the delivery, management and leadership of primary health care.
- Demonstrate values consistent with the ethical delivery of expert advanced nursing practice.
- Exemplify unique meanings associated with expert advanced nursing practice and the profession.
- Actively and intellectually engage in advanced nursing and health care delivery designed to enhance expertise in caring for diverse populations.
Post Graduate DNP
The Post Graduate DNP can be completed by nurses with MSN degrees in six consecutive semesters, including summer. Didactic courses use distance technology in a synchronous, asynchronous, or occasional (face to face) format.
At the completion of the program, students in the Post Graduate DNP are required to have 500 clock hours of supervised clinical experiences. The experiences depend on the type of DNP project and made in collaboration with faculty. The student must have completed 500 clinical hours in an MSN and/or MSN post-grad certificate program prior to entering the Post-Graduate DNP program.