Graduates celebrated during 45th annual College of Nursing ceremony
Faculty, friends, and family鈥攊ncluding parents, grandparents, and one little sister鈥 delighted in pinning College of Nursing graduates during the 2019 Baccalaureate Nursing Pinning Ceremony.
An historic tradition with roots that date back to the Crusades through the Renaissance Era and the Crimean War, the Pinning Ceremony officially marks a student鈥檚 transition into the profession of nursing. The first pinning ceremony was held at the College of Nursing in 1974, and the tradition continues with 97 students honored at this year鈥檚 event held during National Nurses Week in May.
As explained by Dean Kimberly Christopher, the pin also symbolizes service with its rights and responsibilities, students鈥 academic accomplishments, and a bond among nursing classmates.
As students entered the Main Auditorium holding candles and proceeded onto the stage where they would be pinned by someone special to them, a full audience was eager to celebrate the culmination of four years of nursing education on the eve of Commencement.
鈥淭his is a time of celebration for all that you have accomplished. It is a time of thanks, for all of those who helped you to work hard, to never give up, and to achieve the dream of becoming a nurse,鈥 said Dr. Jennifer Viveiros, assistant professor of nursing.
鈥淚 speak for all of your faculty as I say congratulations for a job well done! We were honored to walk this journey with you and we are excited for all that you have to offer the profession of nursing,鈥 Viveiros added.
Keep an open mind and heart, says Dean Christopher
After thanking family and friends for providing the support essential to ensuring students鈥 success and the College of Nursing faculty for their commitment to outstanding education, Dean Christopher shared some advice with the graduates.
鈥淔or the nursing profession, these are challenging and exciting times. Nurses have and will continue to make imperative and essential contributions to the health and well-being of all members of our society,鈥 she said.
鈥淕raduates, I urge you to embrace these opportunities to contribute. Give them your very best effort,鈥 Dean Christopher added. 鈥淎pproach each opportunity with an open mind, open heart, a sense of humility, and a sense of humor.鈥
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Provost Karim tells nursing graduates 鈥渢o embrace the calling鈥
Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Mohammad Karim explained one of the theories surrounding the pinning tradition. 鈥淚n the 1860s, Florence Nightingale was honored with the Red Cross of St. George for her selfless efforts in treating men injured during the Crimean War. Because she believed in acknowledging a job well done, she in turn presented a medal of excellence to her hardest working nursing graduates,鈥 he said.
鈥淢y advice to you today is to embrace the calling, accept the sacred responsibility that society placed upon you鈥攖he duty to care for the afflicted, and the expectation that you will be a full participant in the drive to make quality health care in America and around the world accessible to all,鈥 said Provost Karim.
Develop your nursing identity, advises keynote speaker
Guest speaker Emma McKim Mitchell 鈥06, PhD, MSN, RN, recalled her student experiences in the College of Nursing, including having her mother as one of her faculty instructors. Debbie Hawkins, MS, DNS-BC was a faculty member at 禁漫天堂 for 21 years and taught her daughter in family nursing and psychiatric nursing.
Mitchell鈥檚 interest in global nursing began at 禁漫天堂 and continued while earning her doctorate in the BSN to PhD program at the University of Virginia, where she now teaches.
鈥淢y guiding philosophy, focused on capacity building in global health, began here at 禁漫天堂,鈥 Mitchell said. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to learn more about the current global health experiences of UMassD students, guided by the same recognition of the importance of not dropping in and then right out of communities, but of establishing partnerships and focusing on capacity.鈥
She talked of the 鈥済local perspective,鈥 of finding common threads in global health that have relevance in local communities here in the U.S. 鈥淟ook for ways to incorporate this idea of a glocal perspective into your nursing identity. As you leave here, you鈥檒l continue to develop skills and experiences, and all of this will lead to the development of each of your identities as nurses,鈥 Mitchell said.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e joining the most trusted profession, not because of the nursing shortage and job security because that won鈥檛 sustain you and won鈥檛 help you build your nursing identity, but because of the impact you have on people鈥檚 lives,鈥 Mitchell added.
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Following the pinning ceremony, the graduates recited the Nightingale Pledge in honor of the founder of modern nursing.
鈥淚鈥檓 very excited,鈥 said Jessica Dodge 鈥19, who plans to work at St. Luke鈥檚 Hospital in New Bedford. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a long time coming and I鈥檓 ready to transition.鈥
Her classmate, Alyssa Aucoin 鈥19, plans to become a children鈥檚 psychiatric nurse. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a long journey and now it鈥檚 time to pass the big test,鈥 she said, referring to the NCLEX exam required to practice nursing.