Mar 28, 2024  
Undergraduate Catalog-Handbook 2021-2022 
    
Undergraduate Catalog-Handbook 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

About MCCN



Catholic Identity

Mount Carmel College of Nursing, a private Catholic college, has developed several commitments to promote its identity as a Catholic institution of higher education. These commitments include:

  • Be faithful to the teachings of the Catholic Church.
  • Serve others, particularly the poor, underprivileged, and vulnerable members of society.
  • Witness the Catholic faith and Judeo Christian values through Catholic administrators, faculty, and staff, and through those of other faith traditions.
  • Integrate Catholic values into the curriculum; assure faculty and student awareness of the convictions of Catholic health care.
  • Create a campus culture and environment that is expressive and supportive of a Catholic way of life.

Mission Statement

In the spirit of the Catholic tradition, we welcome a diverse population of students from all faiths, to prepare them academically and professionally as competent and compassionate nurse leaders, who are lifelong learners, and who possess the moral courage to continuously promote the health of individuals and communities.

Core Values

  • Academic Excellence
  • Respect
  • Compassion
  • Social Responsibility
  • Diversity

Vision

Be THE innovative academic center preparing nurses as the most trusted partners in health care.

College Profile

At Mount Carmel College of Nursing, students are able to take advantage of small classes, one-on-one instruction, the opportunity to form lifelong bonds with classmates, and personal contact with faculty, staff, and administration. A variety of co-curricular experiences exist to enrich the college experience.

Mount Carmel’s small size also means that instructors focus on teaching. Although faculty are involved in research and other scholarly work, publishing, and clinical practice, their first commitment is to enhance students’ professional preparation with comprehensive theoretical knowledge and rich and diverse clinical learning experiences.

Mount Carmel College of Nursing is a subsidiary corporation of Mount Carmel Health System, whose parent is Trinity Health. This affiliation with MCHS offers Mount Carmel College of Nursing students a wide variety of clinical experiences that include four acute care hospitals, community outreach programs, hospice, home health, and ambulatory care centers.

College History

Nursing education has been offered at Mount Carmel since the diploma program was established in 1903. The diploma nursing program graduated more than 4,500 nurses and established a tradition of excellence in nursing education.

In 1985, forward thinking administrators and faculty began the move from a hospital diploma nursing program to a college offering a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN). Mount Carmel College of Nursing was formally established in 1988. The first class of students was enrolled in Fall Semester 1990.

A special track for registered nurses who wish to earn a BSN was added to the nursing program in 1996, and the Online RN-BSN Program started in Fall 2011. A Master of Science (MS) degree was initiated in Fall 2003, and a 13-month Second Degree Accelerated Program followed in Spring 2007. In Fall 2009, a satellite location for the BSN Program was launched on the campus of Fairfield Medical Center in Lancaster, Ohio. The Clinical Skills and Simulation Center was opened Fall 2012. An online post-master’s Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program enrolled its first students in Fall 2015.

Location

Mount Carmel College of Nursing is located west of downtown Columbus, just north of I-70 and west of SR315, on the corner of West Town Street and South Davis Avenue. With well over a million residents in its metropolitan area, Columbus is a diverse city. Collegiate and professional sports, innovative shopping and restaurants, Broadway series productions, national concert tours, plus world-class symphony, art museum, opera and ballet companies call Columbus home. The College also operates a satellite location at Fairfield Medical Center in Lancaster, Ohio, where it offers the traditional BSN program.

Accreditation and Affiliations

Mount Carmel College of Nursing is fully accredited by The Higher Learning Commission (HLC)1 which serves as a resource to externally evaluate the quality of College educational offerings.

The College is authorized by the Ohio Department of Higher Education2 to grant the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) degree (including the Fairfield Medical Center satellite location), the Master of Science (MS) degree, and the Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree.

The College is authorized by the Ohio Board of Nursing3 to operate/deliver the pre-licensure nursing program.

The Baccalaureate Nursing, Master’s, Post-Master’s Certificate and Doctor of Nursing Practice Programs are accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE).4

The College has collaborative relationships with The Ohio State University (OSU) and Columbus State Community College (CSCC). Mount Carmel students may enroll in selected general education courses taught at either OSU or CSCC. Mount Carmel students have access to the library and testing and tutorial services offered by both of these institutions. In addition, Mount Carmel has collaborative relationships with Ohio Dominican University,and Wilmington College whereby students enrolled in these colleges can matriculate to Mount Carmel and earn a baccalaureate degree in nursing. Mount Carmel has a collaborative relationship with Ohio University-Lancaster to provide the first-year curriculum and selected general education courses for students enrolled in the BSN program at Fairfield Medical Center.

Mount Carmel College of Nursing holds membership in the following organizations:

  • American Association of Colleges of Nursing
  • American Association of Collegiate Registrars & Admissions Officers
  • American Association of Higher Education
  • Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities
  • Association of Health Science Educational Consortium
  • Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Ohio
  • National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities
  • National League for Nursing
  • Ohio Association for College Admission Counselors
  • Ohio Association of College Registrars and Admissions Officers
  • Ohio Council of Deans and Directors of Nursing
  • Ohio League for Nursing

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1Higher Learning Commission, 30 North La Salle Street, Suite 2400, Chicago, IL 60602-2504, 312-263-0456, www.hlcommission.org.

2Ohio Department of Higher Education, 25 South Front Street, Columbus, OH 43215, 614-466-6000, www.ohiohighered.org.

3Ohio Board of Nursing, 17 South High Street, Suite 400, Columbus, OH 43215, 614-466-3947, www.nursing.ohio.gov.

4Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education, 655 K Street NW, Suite 750,  Washington DC, 20001, 202-887-6791, www.aacn.nche.edu.

Assessment, Evaluation and Institutional Effectiveness

Institutional Effectiveness is an organizing term inclusive of many of the higher education practices described over the years using terms such as assessment, evaluation, and quality improvement. In the HLC’s current Criteria and Core Components for Accreditation, Institutional Effectiveness is a theme throughout the requirements but is specifically outlined in Criterion Five: Resources, Planning, and Institutional Effectiveness. Several of the standards from across the Criteria which relate directly to Institutional Effectiveness include:

  • The institution links its processes for assessment of student learning, evaluation of operations, planning and budgeting.
  • The institution uses information on student retention, persistence, and completion of programs to make improvements as warranted by the data.
  • The institution collects and analyzes information on student retention, persistence, and completion of its programs.
  • The institution uses the information gained from assessment to improve student learning.
  • The institution evaluates the success of its graduates.
  • The institution maintains a practice of regular program reviews and acts upon the findings.
  • The institution has effective processes for assessment of student learning and for achievement of learning goals in academic and cocurricular offerings.
  • The planning process encompasses the institution as a whole and considers the perspectives of internal and external constituent groups.
  • The institution plans on the basis of a sound understanding of its current capacity, including fluctuations in the institution’s sources of revenue and enrollment.
  • Institutional planning anticipates evolving external factors, such as technology advancements, demographic shifts, globalization, and the economy and state support.

The standards noted above are consistent with other standards and requirements such as those outlined by the College’s specialized accreditor for nursing education programs, CCNE. These standards reflect expectations from across the higher education accreditation and regulatory landscape that institutions of higher education embrace a culture of continuous quality improvement which produces significant, verifiable results.

Institutional Effectiveness is the not the responsibility only of the faculty, a single committee, or the leadership team. An institution can only be truly effective when all of its members embrace a shared vision of operational and academic excellence.

In support of continuous quality improvement, the College has developed a Master Plan for Institutional Effectiveness (MPIE) which summarizes College goals, expected outcomes, and methods of measuring progress toward these goals. The plan is overseen by the Evaluation and Institutional Effectiveness Committee, which integrates evaluation of all aspects of the College’s academic programs and operations in support of institutional effectiveness. It is an expectation within the College that as faculty, staff, and students are called upon to engage in various aspects of the continuous quality improvement and evaluation process (including through surveys, requests for feedback or proposals, task forces, and other methods), that they contribute fully and in a timely manner.

Philosophy of Nursing

Mount Carmel College of Nursing provides educational programs in the spirit of the Catholic tradition with inclusion of a diverse population of all faiths, that enhances the unique intellectual, moral, spiritual, and psychosocial development of the person. The faculty accepts responsibility to prepare professional nurses for theory and evidence-based practice, at the basic and advanced levels, who reflect the values and standards of the profession.]

Nursing is the practice of caring behaviors founded upon the integration of general education and professional studies. Our approach to caring is rooted in the values of service, reverence, autonomy, diversity, stewardship, safety, and integrity. Nursing involves the compassionate care of individuals, families, communities, and populations. The nurse is a health care professional who enacts multifaceted roles to promote optimal health during all life experiences. Nurses work collaboratively with clients and interdisciplinary teams, using the nursing process to design, deliver, coordinate, and implement health care. They respond to the diverse and changing needs of society in the local community as well as the broader, global community. Nurses are both knowledgeable and active in political, economic, and regulatory processes that influence health care practices. 

Health involves the harmonious integration of all dimensions of the client, whether an individual, family, community, or population. Health is a dynamic, lifelong, multidimensional construct shaped by culture. Changes in health status occur in response to the stressors and strengths of the internal and external environment. The nurse provides holistic, culturally-responsive, caring interventions directed at assisting the client to promote health.

Baccalaureate nursing education provides the foundation for professional nursing practice and lifelong learning. Graduate nursing education provides the foundation for specialized roles in education, administration, and clinical practice. Graduate education prepares nurses to serve as change agents, policymakers, and interdisciplinary partners in the care of patients, families, and populations. Research, theory for advanced practice, and strategies for validating and utilizing research findings are integral to the study of nursing. Through a collaborative and interactive process, the self-directed learner develops the skills of critical thinking, effective communication, holistic assessment, caregiving, and leadership for professional practice. Clinical practice, which is the essence of nursing, is augmented through nursing theory and evidence-based practice.

 

General Education in the Nursing Program

General education is the foundation of professional education and provides the learner with the opportunity to develop the skills of critical thinking, independent decision making, and leadership, along with value formation and openness to cultural diversity. General education integrates and bridges the disciplines. It weaves a cohesive pattern of meaning into the total life experience. The practice of professional nursing is based on a synthesis of knowledge from the humanities, sciences, nursing theory, and research.

Philosophy of Teaching

Mount Carmel College of Nursing (MCCN) seeks to be THE innovative academic center preparing nurses as the most trusted partners in healthcare. The faculty at MCCN believe that teaching and learning represents a dynamic, interactive sharing of knowledge that stimulates lifelong learning for both learner and educator.  Both learners and faculty are responsible for a collaborative teaching-learning process. Students are responsible for engaging in learning opportunities, while faculty are responsible for providing innovative, active, and inclusive nursing education based on theory and evidence. As faculty, we pledge to maintain our expertise and to promote nursing knowledge. The MCCN Core values of academic excellence, respect, compassion, social responsibility, and diversity guide our teaching processes. 

We strive to create an intellectually challenging learning environment where faculty role-model professional education and nursing standards. We believe in developing caring relationships with students that promote personal, academic, and professional growth.  We believe in developing the learner to their greatest potential through the advancement of knowledge, skills, and attitudes that are hallmarks of the professional nurse. We recognize that students are individuals with unique needs and strengths requiring personalized attention. Included in our approach is a focus on the development of curiosity, critical thinking, and information literacy, which are essential to the life-long learner. As content changes, so must the faculty and student be able to change, adapt, and learn anew.