ley all-nighters, :
I'm proud of you. Thanks for a great summer
and a great paper. j.h.
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Nursing
From page 1
designed to help the School of Public Health re
evaluate the program and reach more solid conclu
sions. . -
"I thought legislation would reduce the tension '
in the department and among the nursing pro
grams students," Fenner said. "I thought the time
would help Dr. Friday to go back and start all over
. . . so they can come out with a mechanism for
providing that service." "
Most of the students in the School of Public
Health's nursing program have chosen that depart
ment because it was more education-oriented, ac
cording to the president of the class of 1982-83
public health nursing program, Ella Harmeyer.
. The School of Nursing, which operates on a
more clinical one-toone basis, does not give the
public-oriented emphasis which the .School of
Public Health does, Harmeyer said.
In January', Dean Ibrahim appointed a commis-.
sion of nine members of the medical profession,
from outside the School of Public Health to look
into the possibilities of pursuing a combination
program between the School of Public Health and
the School of Nursing. -
The move was met with criticism from both
students and graduates of the program.
"To teach or to get a job with a public health
agency, you need to graduate from an accredited
program," said Carol Hindman in January, a
first-year student from Iowa.
"Those people I talked to were people who had
graduated from the nursing program," Fenner
said. "They wanted to see the department as iden
tifiable." : , r.
Many students had also feared that the program
might lose some its faculty members as well as its
accreditation from the National League of Nursing
if the curriculum lost its departmental status.
Accreditation is also a key issue with the mem
bers of. the UNC Board of Governors, who have
criticized the General Assembly's intervention. .
UNC President Friday expressed his concern
Monday. .
"In all my years here, this is the first time the
General Assembly ever. sought te prescribe the in
ternal structure in a university," Friday said. "It is
possible that a serious question of accreditation
can be raised because of legislative intervention."
: Robert B. Moorehead, associate dean of the
School of Public Health, agreed with Friday. "We
don't think the legislature should be involving
itself in an internal matter," he said.
Moorehead said that the original plan to
. eliminate the nursing program would have allowed
for more resources geared toward doctoral pro-
grams. : v ' . ' v .
"Doctoral programs require research facilities
and resources," Moorehead said. However, the
major emphasis in the School of Public Health
would still be master's degrees, he said.
While Moorehead said that he did not know if
Friday was consulted on the decision to eliminate
the nursing program, he added that "the General
Administration was informed." ,
Moorehead said that while- this class was op
posed to the elimination of the departmental
status, there were more factors-involved than the
student's preferences.
, "Curriculum decisions have to be made over a
longer term basis than over one class," Moorehead
said.
Butnow the N.C. General Assembly has changed
all of that. The department's nursing program will
remain as it is until August 198S, according to a
provision buried in one of the spending bills ap
... proved. last month, v ,
Harmeyer said that this directed current stu
dents in the program to question that action by the
state's lawmakers, one of which they were not in
formed. ; " ',
"We basically understood that the decision to
. close down" the department of public health nurs
ing program was non-negotiable," she said.
None of the students knew anything of the leg
islative interest in their curriculum, and they had
expended much time and energy on various com
mittees working on the designs of the new cur
riculum, Harmeyer said.
Harmeyer was concerned that their work would
not be of any use when the legislative delay ends.
The master's in public health program, which
includes 11 -month programs in administrative,
supervisory and occupational health tracts, is one
of two programs in the UNC School of Public
Health's nursing department. . "
The secondrthe master of science in public
health nursing program, is a two-year program
specifically geared toward education. '
m
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Tavern
." Above
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L
Sun-Thurs 1 0:30-2am
Fri & Sat. 10:30-3am
6 The Tar Heel Thursday, August 4, 1983