Thought this would be of interest: Victoria Advocate | UHV School of Nursing to pin first master's degree recipients

The University of Houston-Victoria School of Nursing will reach another milestone in its history during a pinning ceremony Dec. 12.

"Pinning ceremonies are a tradition at schools of nursing and represent a rite of passage," founding Dean Kathryn Tart said.

"This ceremony is extra-special because seven students will receive the first Master's of Science in Nursing degrees awarded by UHV."

The event will be at 1:30 p.m. at the Leonard E. Merrell Center, 6301 S. Stadium Lane, and will immediately follow UHV's fall commencement ceremony.

During the graduation ceremony, the expected 38 bachelor's candidates and seven master's candidates will have special pins affixed to their uniforms. The pin signifies the program from which a nurse graduated. Each nursing school has its own unique pin.

"The master's candidates we are pinning on Dec. 12 will go on to become the nurse leaders in the Victoria and Fort Bend communities," Tart said.

MSN graduates choose from either nursing education or nursing administration concentrations. The former will go on to teach other nurses. A major cause of the nursing shortage is a lack of qualified educators, Tart noted.

The latter group will lead nurses and manage the institutions staffed by them.

Regardless of their concentration, all of the MSN graduates had to acquire and demonstrate skills in advanced nursing practice, research and public service, Tart said.

Among the first seven graduate students are two of the first Johnson Scholars to finish the program. Sabrina Davila and Lance Neill, both of Victoria, were awarded full scholarships as part of a $130,000 grant the school received in 2008 from the Victoria-based M.G. and Lillie A. Johnson Foundation.

"I was able to work part time and not worry about working full time and doing all the school work to get a master's degree," Neill said.

The scholarship let him spend more time on his work and avoid taking out student loans.

Neill added that he was honored to be a part of the first master's class.
"As Dr. Tart always said, in 100 years, we will still be the first class," Neill said. "I keep thinking about that."

The pinning tradition can be traced back to when Florence Nightingale placed the Maltese Cross, used by the medical caregivers of the Knights Hospitallers since the Crusades, on the lapels of her nursing school graduates in the late 1800s.

The UHV School of Nursing pins presented in the ceremony will stay with the graduates for the rest of their professional careers to let patients know their caregivers are part of a higher order of nurses, Tart said.
The pin also serves to remind the nurses of all they went through to reach that honored position in healthcare.

Along with receiving their pins, the graduation candidates and their families will hear a keynote address from Janet Leatherwood, vice president and chief nursing officer of Methodist Sugar Land Hospital in Sugar Land.

Prior to joining the hospital in 2001, Leatherwood served as chief nursing officer of Conroe Regional Medical Center in Conroe. She now is vice chair of PRAB and is a member of the University of Houston System at Sugar Land Advisory Board and the UHV School of Nursing Advisory Board.

The UHV nursing program started in 2006 and was granted school status by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board in 2007. In October, the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education fully accredited the undergraduate and graduate programs.