Nov 21, 2024  
2015-2016 College Catalog 
    
2015-2016 College Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Nursing, Two-Year Track, ADN


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The Associate Degree Nursing (ADN) program prepares graduates to sit for the licensure exam for registered nurses. It is a balanced curriculum including both nursing and general education courses. Course content includes the role of the registered nurse, health care concepts, and technical observations and skills. Supervised clinical laboratory experiences are planned to focus on care of patients with well-defined health problems where probable outcomes of nursing interventions are predictable. Nursing courses must be taken in sequential order.

It is the goal of Shelton State Community College to graduate well prepared nurses who are strong practitioners both clinically and academically. To that end, ADN students should plan for twelve to sixteen hours per week of clinical experience. Although these hours will be planned as conveniently as possible, there may be some evening or weekend clinical assignments. Clinical times are included in the course information at the beginning of each nursing course. Because of the clinical time involved and the preparation time for some of the nursing courses, students are encouraged to consider completing all the academic requirements (non-nursing courses) prior to admission to the ADN program.

The program offers two tracks for admission into the ADN curriculum. Students who have no nursing background may be admitted to the two-year track. Admission occurs during the fall semester and twenty-one (21) months, or five (5) consecutive semesters, are required to complete this track of study. Students who complete an approved PN program and hold a PN license may apply for admission to the career mobility track. Twelve (12) to fifteen (15) months or three (3) to four (4) consecutive semesters are required to complete this track of study with selection for admission occurring during fall semester.

Admission to the ADN program is a competitive process; the number of applicants may exceed the number of spaces available. The space available at clinical sites and student-teacher ratios required by the Alabama Board of Nursing limit the number of applicants accepted each year.

Transfer students in the ADN program must complete all required courses in the prescribed sequence. Academic credits will transfer as usual, however, Human Anatomy and Physiology I and II (BIO 202  and BIO 201 ) credits must have been completed within the past five (5) years. If not, at least one of the two courses must be repeated for credit. Nursing transfer credits are evaluated on an individual basis. Verification of knowledge and skills may be required (See Transfer Policy).

The Associate Degree Nursing program is approved by the Alabama Board of Nursing (ABN), RSA Plaza, Suite 50, 770 Washington Avenue, P.O. Box 303900, Montgomery, AL 36130-3900; telephone 334.293.5200 or 800.656.5318. Visit their website at www.abn.alabama.gov. The ADN program is also accredited by the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing, Inc. (ACEN), 3343 Peachtree Road NE, Suite 850, Atlanta, GA 30326; telephone 404.975.5000, or visit www.acenursing.org.

Note: At the date of this publication, there are statewide revisions taking place in the Alabama Department of Postsecondary Education Nursing programs that may necessitate changes in the admission criteria, curriculum, policies, and procedures.

General Admission Procedure

  1. Make application and be accepted to Shelton State Community College. Application must be completed online.
  2. Submit copies of official transcripts of all colleges and universities attended to the Office of Enrollment Services. All transcripts must be evaluated by the Office of Enrollment Services for determination of course credits and GPA calculations.
  3. Meet all academic requirements and complete any program admission requirements (listed below).
  4. After successful completion of all academic and admission requirements, the student may submit the online application for admission to the nursing program. Applications are accepted between May 1 and June 1 for fall admission (Two Year Track), and between October 1 and November 1 (ADN Mobility).
  5. Complete application checklist provided after submission of the online nursing application.

Two Year Track of the ADN Program (Two-Year Track) - Minimum Admission Standards:

  1. Unconditional admission to the College
  2. Receipt of completed application packet for the ADN two-year track by June 1. (Applications are completed online and are accepted between May 1 and June 1 each year.)
  3. Minimum of 2.50 GPA on last twenty-four hours of credit (undergraduate or graduate) for students with previous college credit
  4. Minimum of 2.50 cumulative high school GPA for students without prior college work. GED or high school transcript must be available by the application deadline.
  5. Eligible to enroll in or must have completed the following:
    1. ENG 101  and MTH 100  or higher math as determined by college placement, and
    2. BIO 201  during the first term of nursing courses. (BIO 103  is a Prerequisite to BIO 201 .)
  6. In good standing with the College
  7. Meet the essential functions or technical standards required for nursing
  8. An official Test of Essential Academic Skills V (TEAS) score taken prior to application and within the last three (3) years.

Admission to the two-year track program is competitive, and the number of students is limited by the number of faculty and clinical facilities available. Meeting minimum requirements does not guarantee acceptance into the program.

Calculation of Points for Students Meeting Minimum Two-Year Track Admission Standards:

After meeting all minimum requirements, applicants are rank-ordered using a point system based on the following:

  1. Official TEAS V score: the higher the score the greater the points received;
  2. Points from selected college courses (i.e. BIO 201 , BIO 202 , BIO 220 ) or selected high school courses (i.e. Algebra II or higher level math, highest level biology, chemistry) are awarded based on grade received in course. A letter grade of “A” is assigned more points than a letter grade of “C”; and
  3. Additional Points
    Additional Points (maximum 11)
    Points   Criteria
    2   Completed eighteen (18) hours of the required academic courses for the nursing program at Shelton State Community College;
    3   Completed medical profession program in high school;
        Completed or enrolled in Emergency Medical Technician program (EMT);
        Completed or enrolled in Nursing Assistant program; OR volunteer/work in healthcare field (six (6) consecutive months or longer)
    6   Completed BIO 201 , BIO 202 , BIO 220 , ENG 101 , MTH 100  or higher.
  A total of 251 points is possible with selection criteria.

Area I - Written Composition: 3 Hours


Area II - Humanities and Fine Arts: 6 Hours


Note:


*Choose from art, art history, dance, ethics, foreign language, literature, music, music history, philosophy, religion or theatre.

Area III - Natural Science or Mathematics: 11 Hours


Note:


*Prerequisite: BIO 103 - Principles of Biology I . Students may take BIO 103  CLEP test through SSCC Testing Center.

Area IV - History, Social, and Behavioral Sciences: 7 Hours


Note:


Student must be accepted into the ADN program prior to enrolling in the NUR 102 NUR 103 , NUR 104 , NUR 105 , NUR 106 , NUR 201 , NUR 202 , NUR 203 , NUR 204  courses.

Total Credit Hours Required for Degree: 73 Hours


Curriculum Sequence for Associate Degree Nursing Two-Year Track


Semester Total: 15 Credits


9T, 14L, 3C

Semester Total: 20 Credits


15T, 5L, 9C

Semester Total: 12 Credits


8T, 4L, 6C

Semester Total: 12 Credits


9T, 0L, 9C

Fifth Semester


Semester Total: 13 Credits


9T, 0L, 12C

Total Credit Hours: 72 to 76 Hours


*Refer to clock-hour to credit-hour ratio guide.
**BIO 103  is a prerequisite for BIO 201 . (Students may take BIO 103  CLEP test through the SSCC Testing Center.)
***Humanities elective must be chosen from art and art history, foreign language, literature, music, music history, philosophy, ethics, religion, theater, and dance.
Note: Nursing program information, policies, and curriculum are subject to change due to restructuring of statewide standardization of nursing programs.

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