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School of Nursing
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About Us
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History
The
School of Nursing, Medical College of Georgia, had its
beginning in 1943 as a Department of Nursing Education
within the College of Education at the University of
Georgia, Athens, with an Atlanta center offering courses to
the graduate nurse population in that city. The following
year the department was transferred to the College of Arts
and Sciences; and in 1945 program, four and one-half years
in length, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in
Nursing Education (BSNE) was established for basic and
registered nurse students. In 1954 these programs of
specialization were discontinued, and the degree of Bachelor
of Science in Nursing (BSN) was authorized.
On January 1, 1956 the Department of Nursing at the
University of Georgia was moved to the Medical College of
Georgia, becoming an autonomous school with a dean appointed
as the administrative head. The transfer was authorized by
the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia
with the determination to develop the Medical College of
Georgia in Augusta as a health science university. Also in
1956 the Eugene Talmadge Memorial Hospital, a state
constructed and managed teaching hospital, was opened.
At the time of the move to Augusta the Baccalaureate nursing
program was the only undergraduate program at the Medical
College. The first BSN degrees were awarded in 1958 Prior to
that approximately 112 BSNE degrees had been conferred by
the University of Georgia.
The Board of Regents authorized a graduate program in
nursing in 1966 The first students were admitted to this
program in 1968 The first Master of Science in Nursing
degrees were conferred in 1969 and the PhD in Nursing
degrees were conferred in 1990 In the fall of 1975 the
graduate satellite program in Savannah, Georgia (SAVSAT) was
opened with offices on the Armstrong State College campus.
As a result of an evaluation study conducted during
1979-1980 the school decided to close the Savannah
Satellite.
In 1974 the Medical College of Georgia instituted a
satellite Baccalaureate nursing program (SONAT) in Athens
with the cooperation of the University of Georgia. Students
in the first classes followed an experimental integrated
curriculum which led
to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Nursing after three
calendar years of full-time study. In 1976 the curriculum
changed to an upper division nursing plan to meet the demand
of transfer undergraduate students and the experimental
program was phased out. Since the Fall of 1978 the
curriculum plans on both the Augusta and Athens campuses
have been identical.
Historical Highlights
1944:
Board of Regents authorized the establishment of a
department of nursing at UGA.
1945:
First two graduates receive BSNE degrees
1956:
Department of Nursing transfers from the UGA to MCG and
becomes a School of Nursing
1956: E.
Louise Grant becomes the first dean.
1958:
School of Nursing Alumni Association established.
1958:
First undergraduate nursing students graduate from the
Medical College of Georgia.
1963: BSN
program is granted initial accreditation by the National
League for Nursing.
1968: MSN
program begins. (Granted initial accreditation by the NLN in
1973.)
1974:
Beta Omicron chapter of Sigma Theta Tau chartered.
1974:
School of Nursing at Athens (SONAT) opens.
1986: PhD
program in nursing approved by the Board of Regents.
1987:
Center for Nursing Research established.
1994:
Board of Regents approved the state's only Nursing
Anesthesia Program.
1995: The
school's first distance program, RN-BSN at Gordon College is
approved.
1997: RN
to MSN/MN Program approved for implementation in Fall, 1998.
1998:
First Endowed Chair of Nursing, the Kellett Chair of Nursing
established.
2000: RN
to BSN Program offered online.
2003:
Faculty Practice Plan implemented.
2005:
Doctor of Nursing Practice program approved, becoming only
the tenth DNP in the nation.
2006:
Clinical Nurse Leader Program approved, one of the first in
the region.
2006: SON
moves into the Health Sciences Building, a multi-million
dollar, state of the art facility.
Chronology of Deans
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Phoebe Kandel
Rohrer
1944-1949 |

E. Louise
Grant
1945-1971 |

Dr. Dorothy T.
White
1971-1976
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Dr. Neila A.
Poshek
1977- 1979 |

Dr. Mary E.
Conway
1980-1990 |

Dr. Vickie A.
Lambert
1990-2000
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Dr. Marlene
Rosenkoetter
2002-2003 |

Dr. Lucy Marion
2004-Present |
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