The lived experience of Doctors of Nursing Practice         returning to school in pursuit of a Doctor of Philosophy degree in nursing

Material Information

Title:
The lived experience of Doctors of Nursing Practice returning to school in pursuit of a Doctor of Philosophy degree in nursing
Series Title:
Barry University Dissertations -- College of Nursing and Health Sciences
Creator:
Greco, Michael
Place of Publication:
Miami, Fla.
Publisher:
Barry University
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
xvi, 262 leaves : illustrations ; 28 cm

Thesis/Dissertation Information

Degree Disciplines:
Nursing

Notes

Abstract:
Background: Historically, the terminal degree for the nursing profession has been the PhD. The profession has created another doctoral degree called the Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) intended for clinical nurses to implement evidence-based practice (IOM, 2010). Many nurses who have earned this terminal degree in practice are returning to school to pursue a second nursing doctorate degree, which is the research-focused PhD degree. This study is meaningful to nursing because unless the essence of the experience of a DNP-prepared clinician actively pursuing the PhD in nursing is understood, nursing will remain uninformed of this practice, which is a responsibility of nursing. Purpose: The purpose of this qualitative research using a heuristic, descriptive phenomenology approach was to discover the experiences of DNPs who have returned to school and are in pursuit or have pursued a PhD in nursing. Philosophical Underpinnings: A transcendental, phenomenological approach, guided by the interpretivist paradigm to gain an understanding of the lived experience of DNP-prepared nurses in pursuit of a PhD in nursing. Methods: A qualitative methodology was employed using phenomenology as its basis. Purposive and snowball sampling were used to select 12 DNP participants for semi-structured interviews and provided data regarding their lived experience of returning to school in their pursuit for a PhD in nursing. Data analysis was guided by Moustakas’ (1994) transcendental phenomenology. Results: Three themes were identified in the experiences of the six women and six men who participated: Wanting to Know Something More, Social-Individual Tensions, and Challenges to Transformational Learning. Conclusion: The DNP participants in this study were on a journey, searching for something more in order to gain professional and personal fulfillment. The participants revealed characteristics integral to being a DNP who has returned to school in pursuit of a PhD in nursing which included the desire to expand on their limited research knowledge and the tensions and challenges to transformational learning surrounding this quest.
Thesis:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Barry University, 2018.
Bibliography:
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 230-248).

Record Information

Source Institution:
Barry University
Holding Location:
Barry University Archives and Special Collections
Rights Management:
Copyright Michael Greco. Permission granted to Barry University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Resource Identifier:
RT75.G74 2018_GrecoMichael ( BU-Local )
Classification:
RT75.G74 2018 ( lcc )

BUDC Membership

Aggregations:
Barry University
Theses and Dissertations