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NUR 3900 in the General Education Curriculum This is not a syllabus template. Because the Nursing program uses standardized syllabi maintained by the course coordinator for all courses, the general education common core syllabus template is not used for NUR courses. You should use the syllabus provided by your course coordinator that will include the required general education information. (If it does not, please call this to the attention of the course coordinator). This document will help to explain why the nursing faculty choose this particular course to be part of the general education program and placed in this category. NUR 3900 partially fulfills the general education requirement for Values and Choices A Ethical Inquiry. Students will have previously addressed this requirement when they took NUR 2000. However since that course is not worth the minimum three credits, NUR 3900 is also required before students are deemed to have met this requirement . Here is the general description of a Values and Choices A course In the ethical inquiry category students explore different systems or models of ethical decision making and apply them to specific cases. Here is the description of NUR 3900: NUR 2000 Leadership and Management in Nursing A course that provides practical assistance to the future nurse manager in the development of effective leadership and management skills in order to assure the best possible environment for the provision of high-quality care. This is the material that is required to appear on the syllabus University General Education Requirement This course, in combination with NUR 2000 taken earlier in the program, meets the University General Education Requirement for Values and Choices A: Ethical Inquiry by addressing the learning outcomes below. Students will compare, contrast and apply various philosophical models of individual ethics and of collective social ethics [V&C 1] Students will articulate various ethical and moral questions and explore their own system of values through examination and analysis of examples drawn from history, literature, popular culture, or current events and controversies. [V&C 6] Students will apply their understanding of ethical systems and models to develop and demonstrate a conscious value system as individuals, students, professionals and citizens [V&C 7]. Students will understand a range of meanings for concepts associated with individual and social ethics such as rights and responsibilities, justice and impartiality, citizenship and social responsibility [V&C 8]. Here are the explanations of how the course meets these outcomes as provided by nursing faculty proposing the course. Students will compare, contrast and apply various philosophical models of individual ethics and of collective social ethics [V&C 1]. This senior level course was designed to complete the students’ ability as novice leaders to apply professional ethics and legal requirements in common clinical situations which always involve the conservation and allocation of scarce resources. This is a process oriented course and students are actively engaged in questioning, discussing and resolving ethical leadership issues during each class session. Students will articulate various ethical and moral questions and explore their own system of values through examination and analysis of examples drawn from history, literature, popular culture, or current events and controversies. [V&C 6]. Examples for study and discussion are chosen from historical and real life controversies related to health care e.g.– Bioethics, the impact of more men entering the nursing profession, choosing who to discharge when ICU beds are full and there is a new admission. Students will apply their understanding of ethical systems and models to develop and demonstrate a conscious value system as individuals, students, professionals and citizens [V&C 7]. Students will understand a range of meanings for concepts associated with individual and social ethics such as rights and responsibilities, justice and impartiality, citizenship and social responsibility [V&C 8]. These two outcomes are addressed throughout the course as follows: All topics listed in the course achedule are approached from an ethical decision making framework. In class activities and discussions, seminar presentations, quizzes/final exam and the Leadership Activity Assignment are utilized as vehicles to assist the student to examine their own ethics and compare them to group/societal and nursing ethics and then develop the ability to apply professional ethics and standards to common professional situations. The seminar presentation, where students approach topics such as “AIDS in the workplace,” will involve students in discussion of concepts such as rights and responsibilities justice and impartiality as applied to employers and employees.