DMACC & ISU sign Nursing Program Transfer Agreement
October 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson
(Des Moines/Ames, Iowa) – Students at the Des Moines Area Community College (DMACC) will be able to take advantage next Fall, of a new 3+1 nursing agreement between the college and Iowa State University, that will allow DMACC students to obtain a degree in Nursing. The Iowa Capital Dispatch reports the community college and four-year university signed an articulation agreement on the new program Wednesday, creating a pathway for DMACC students to easily transfer and earn their bachelor of science in nursing, through a combination of online classes and in-person experiences at ISU.
DMACC Health & Public Services Executive Academic Dean Jeanie McCarville-Kerber said a transfer program between DMACC and ISU has been under discussion since 2018, with staff from both institutions working together to develop the best curriculum and pathway for students. The 3+1 program will be available to nursing students starting in fall 2025. With the new partnership, DMACC nursing students will spend three years at the community college completing their associate of applied science in nursing degree, taking courses developed for the program that align with both institutions’ standards, said Laura Jolly, dean of ISU’s College of Health and Human Sciences.
Once they’ve graduated from DMACC, students must take and pass the National Council Licensure Exam for Registered Nurse Licensure in order to qualify for the transfer to ISU. Their last year of the program will take place mostly online through ISU, with some in-person requirements. ISU Director of Nursing Education Dawn Bowker said the hybrid learning will also allow students to work in the field while finishing their schooling. In addition to the flexibility the 3+1 program provides, Bowker said students will have opportunities to sign up for practicum experiences in the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota and Oslo, Norway.
Bowker said research shows that nurses who hold a bachelor’s degree have improved patient outcomes, decreased medication errors and decreased mortality rates. ISU’s program has a 94% completion rate, she said, compared to the national rate of 60%.
This fall DMACC restructured its nursing program, DMACC Director of Nursing Education Natalia Thilges said, combining its previously standalone associate nursing degree and practical nursing program into a “ladder program.” Now students will first take prerequisite courses then take a year of practical nursing courses and, if they qualify, move ahead to a year of associate nursing degree courses. DMACC also holds a 3+1 program agreement with the University of Iowa for nursing, which they are currently working to modify in order for it to work with the new structure and partnership with ISU.
More than 400 students are currently enrolled in DMACC’s nursing program, which DMACC President Rob Denson said is one of the largest in the state. ISU is the community college’s top transfer institution. DMACC and ISU have a long history of supporting each other through partnerships, Denson said, starting as far back as 2006 with the signing of their first transfer agreement. The schools also have partnerships for fashion design, cybersecurity and supply chain management, and DMACC students get additional supports when they attend ISU due to the DMACC-ISU Connect program.