In Canada, nurse educators from five postsecondary institutions in the province of British Columbia established a collaborative nursing education initiative in 1989, with a vision to transform RN college diploma programs to baccalaureate degree programs. The principles, processes, and structures that served to develop and sustain this nursing education initiative are briefly reviewed. Curriculum, scholarship, and education legislation serve as platforms to critically explore a 25-year history (1989-2014) of successes, challenges, and transitions within this unique nursing education collaboration. The importance of curriculum development as faculty development, program evaluation as an adjunct to pedagogical scholarship, diversity of cross-institutional mandates, political interplay in nursing education, collegiality, and courageous leadership are highlighted. Nurse educators seeking to create successful collaborations must draw upon well-defined principles and organizational structures and processes to guide pedagogical practices and inquiry while remaining mindful of and engaged in professional and societal developments.
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Quality Advancement in Nursing Education-Avancées en formation infirmière. It has been accepted for inclusion in Quality Advancement in Nursing Education-Avancées en formation infirmière by an authorized editor of Quality Advancement in Nursing Education-Avancées en formation infirmière. Recommended Citation Tate, Betty; Chapman, Marilyn; Zawaduk, Cheryl; and Callaghan, Doris (2018) "Valuing Curriculum Evaluation as Scholarship: A Process of Developing a Community of Scholars (Valoriser l'évaluation de programmes d'études comme forme de scholarship : un processus de création d'une communauté de chercheuses),"
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