09 January 2013

How I ended up at UCLA

I’m often asked how I chose UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) as the school I would attend to obtain my PhD. To be honest, I don’t feel as though I chose it, but that it chose me.

Before I was halfway through my MSN program, I began looking at nursing PhD programs. I also considered EdD programs, because my MSN is in nursing education, and I have a passion for teaching. Enrolled at the time in an online program, I was not keen on pursuing another online program, but I knew this meant I would have to move. I looked around the UCLA School of Nursing website, but did not see how the PhD program would be a good fit for me, because my research interest was nursing education and the PhD program at UCLA does not focus heavily on research related to that interest. In fact, until a chance meeting with the nursing school’s director of recruitment, outreach and admissions, my mind was made up that UCLA was not the place for me.

During a break at the 2010 Leadership Summit in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA, sponsored by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International, I approached UCLA School of Nursing’s exhibit table. To be honest, I was alone and, because the woman behind the table was also alone, thought I’d stir up a little conversation. I told Rhonda Flenoy-Younger—director of recruitment—that I had looked at UCLA, but didn’t think the program was for me.

She encouraged me to look at the information on a flash drive she handed me, and she took down my email address. She also introduced me to the dean of the School of Nursing. In speaking with him about my research interest, he encouraged me to apply to UCLA but not with the same research interest. When I returned home, I began receiving emails from Flenoy-Younger, inviting me to meetings of the Pan-African Nursing Students and Alumni Association (PANSAA) at UCLA. I ignored the first two meeting invitations, but responded to the third.

At the PANSAA meeting, I immediately felt a level of comfort among the students that I hadn’t felt at my undergraduate school or in the online MSN program from which I had recently graduated. Very interesting to me was that there were alumni in attendance, some who had graduated in the 1970s and ‘80s. Even the dean was there. I left that meeting feeling that, maybe, UCLA had something to offer after all. 

The next day, after attending a PhD information session presented by the UCLA School of Nursing (UCLA SON), I was sold! The support I felt from the faculty, their obvious love of research and UCLA, the personal stories of those on the student panel, and the commitment of the School of Nursing to provide tuition for all graduate teachers’ assistants was all I needed to make my decision. I left the session with my mind made up—I would apply to UCLA and would continue to apply until I was accepted.

A few days later, while attending the 2010 Association of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses (AWHONN) convention in Las Vegas, Nevada, I met a nurse educator-researcher who encouraged me to contact a faculty member at UCLA SON who was her personal friend. After contacting the professor, I set up a meeting with her.

First, though, I met with another faculty member, who encouraged me to choose a research interest about which I was truly passionate, not one that simply coincided with my MSN degree. At that point, my interest changed from nursing education to teen-pregnancy prevention. A week or two later, I met the friend of the nurse I had met at the AWHONN conference. Unbeknownst to me, the area of nursing about which I was now most passionate was the research area of this faculty member. I was sitting face-to-face with a world-renowned expert in teen pregnancy, and I had no idea! The encouragement I received from these two faculty members only strengthened my resolve to obtain my PhD from the UCLA School of Nursing.

Watch for my next post on choosing a doctoral program.

For Reflections on Nursing Leadership (RNL), published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International.

2 comments:

  1. i have read your blog story, its very tremendous writing skills saw in your blog, just keep writing for us...

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    Replies
    1. Kristine, thank you for reading! I will continue to write this blog as long as I am able to do so.

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