Summer Sessions 2025 Course Syllabus
Course: RNSG-1137 (Section: 2, CRN: 61157) Professional Nursing Concepts III |
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Instructor Information | |||||||||
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Instructor | Dr. Diane Hare | ||||||||
haredl@lamarpa.edu | |||||||||
Phone | (409) 984-6358 | ||||||||
Office | Allied Health - Room: 127 | ||||||||
Office Hours | As Posted and by appointment only | ||||||||
Additional Contact Information | |||||||||
Course Information | |||||||||
Description | Application of professional nursing concepts and exemplars within the professional nursing roles. Utilizes concepts of clinical judgment, ethical-legal, evidenced-based practice, patient-centered care, professionalism, safety, teamwork and collaboration. Introduces the concepts of quality improvement, health information technology, and health care organizations. Incorporates concepts into role development of the professional nurse. This course lends itself to a concept-based approach. | ||||||||
Required Textbooks |
Textbook Purchasing Statement: A student attending Lamar State College Port Arthur is not under any obligation to purchase a textbook from the college-affiliated bookstore. The same textbook may also be available from an independent retailer, including an online retailer.
American Psychological Association. (2020). Concise guide to APA Style (7th ed.). ISBN 9781433832134 Catalano, J. (2024). Nursing now Today’s issues, tomorrow’s, trends (9th ed.). ISBN 9781719649773 Dillon, P. (2017). Clinical simulations for nursing education: participant volume (2nd ed.) ISBN-13: 9780803669697 Giddens, J. (2025). Concepts for nursing practice. (4th ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 9780323809825 Halter, M.J. (2022). Varcarolis’ foundations of psychiatric-mental health nursing (9th ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 9780323697071 HESI (2024). HESI comprehensive review for the NCLEX-RN examination (7th Ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 9780323831932 Ignatavicius, D. (2025). Developing clinical judgment for professional nursing and the next-generation NCLEX-RN examination. (2nd Ed.) Elsevier. ISBN 9780323935388 Jones, S.A. (2022). Pocket Anatomy & Physiology (4th ed.). F.A. Davis ISBN 978-1719642958 Jones, S.A. (2020). ECG Mastery Improving your ECG interpretation skills (2nd.ed.). F.A. Davis ISBN 978-0803676930 Leek, V.I. (2023). Pharm Phlash! Pharmacology Flash Cards (4th ed.). F.A. Davis ISBN 978-1719647250 Lewis, S., Bucher, L., Heitkemper, M., & Hardin, M. (2023). Medical‐Surgical nursing, assessment and management of clinical problems. (12th ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 9780323792332 Lippincott NCLEX-RN PassPoint Powered by PrepU: Study software for NCLEX-RN® McKinney, E.S, Murray, S.S., James, S.R., Nelson, K., & Ashwill, J. (2022). Maternal-Child nursing (6th ed.). Elsevier ISBN 9780323697903 Myers, E. (2022) RNotes Nurse’s clinical pocket guide (6th ed.). F.A. Davis. ISBN-13: 978-1-7196-4625-3 Nugent, P., & Vitale, B. (2023). Test Success: Clinical Judgment and Test-Taking Strategies (10th ed.). F. A. Davis. ISBN 978-1-7196-4724-3 Perry, A.G., Potter, P.A., Ostendorf, W., & Laplante, N. (2025). Clinical nursing skills & techniques (11th ed.). Mosby-Elsevier. ISBN 9780443107184 Silvestri, L. A., & Silvestri, A.E. (2023). Saunders comprehensive review for the NCLEX-RN examination (9th ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 9780323795302 Thompson, J. (2022). Essential health assessment (2nd ed). F.A. Davis. ISBN 978-1-7196-4232-3 Zerwekh, J. (2023) Illustrated study guide for the NCLEX-RN (11th ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 9780323777797 Online resources: HESI Case Studies: Complete RN Collection. Elsevier. Perfect Package: Vallerand Drug Guide 18e & Van Leeuwen Comp Man Lab & Dx Tests 10e & Taber’s Med Dict 24e (4th ed.). F.A. Davis. ISBN-13: 978-1-7196-4894-3
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Additional Materials/Resources | None. | ||||||||
Corequisites/Prerequisites |
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Learning Outcomes |
In accordance with the mission of Lamar State College - Port Arthur, this course encourages the student to develop the particular skills, knowledge, and attitudes needed for success in the field of Associate Degree Nursing. Upon successful completion of the course, the student should be able to:
1. Utilize a systematic process to analyze selected health care concepts for diverse patients across the lifespan. (PSLO 1; PSLO 3, PSLO 4) Measured by: reading-based discussions; case studies; and exams based on readings. 2. Describe and prioritize nursing management for selected health care concepts. (PSLO 1; PSLO 2, PSLO 3, PSLO 4) Measured by: reading-based discussions; case studies; and exams based on readings. 3. Apply the learned concepts to other concepts or exemplars. (PSLO 2, PSLO 3, PSLO 4) Measured by: reading-based discussions; case studies; and exams based on readings. 4. Examine the interrelatedness among health care concepts to make clinical judgments for optimum patient care outcomes. (PSLO 1; PSLO 2, PSLO 3, PSLO 4) Measured by: reading-based discussions; case studies; and exams based on readings. 5. Identify the scope of practice in professional nursing roles; incorporate clinical reasoning and evidence-based practice outcomes as the basis for decision-making and providing safe patient-centered care; identify the legal-ethical parameters for professional nursing practice as related to selected exemplars; manage health information technology to support decision-making and improve patient care within delivery systems; and demonstrate principles of leadership/management including delegation. |
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Program Student Learning Outcomes |
Upon completion of the Upward Mobility Nursing Program graduates will be able to: PSLO 1: Integrates professional caring into practice decisions within the scope of practice for a registered nurse. PSLO 2: Demonstrates safe, competent, holistic care for a diverse group of individuals who have complex health care needs PSLO 3: Accept responsibility and accountability for the effectiveness of one’s own nursing practice and professional growth. PSLO 4: Communicate effectively with clients, peers and other members of the interdisciplinary heath care team to provide evidence-based care. |
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Lecture Topics Outline |
Week 1 (June 3, 2025): Syllabus, Clinical Judgment Assignment(s): Refer to BlackBoard and schedule Week 2 (June 10, 2025): RNSG 1538 Lectures Assignment(s): Refer to BlackBoard and schedule Week 3 (June 17, 2025): Safety, Evidence Based Practice, Introduction of Group Presentations, Ethics & Legal Practice Assignment(s): Refer to BlackBoard and schedule Week 4 (June 24, 2025): Professionalism, Teamwork & Collaboration; Research Paper: Body of the Paper Assignment(s): Refer to BlackBoard and schedule Week 5 (July 1, 2025): Mid-Term Exam Assignment(s): Refer to BlackBoard and schedule Week 6 (July 8, 2025): Quality Improvement, Healthcare Organizations Assignment(s): Refer to BlackBoard and schedule Week 7 (July 15, 2025):, Health Information Technology, Begin Group Presentations Assignment(s): Refer to BlackBoard and schedule Week 8 (July 22, 2025): Research Paper Part 2 Assignment Due Week 9 (July 29, 2025): Complete Group Presentations Week 10 (August 6, 2025): Final Exam |
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Major Assignments Schedule |
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Final Exam Date | August 6, 2025 - 8:00 AM Through August 6, 2025 - 11:00 AM | ||||||||
Grading Scale | 90-100 = A 80-89 = B 75-79 = C 74-60 = D 59 or Below = F | ||||||||
Determination of Final Grade |
Examinations are based on course objectives. Course content from the biological and behavioral sciences as well as previous nursing knowledge is included on exams as appropriate.
The following method will be used to determine each student’s grade in the course: Activities 20% (Quizzes, Assignments, Discussion Boards, Case studies average) Research Paper 20% MidTerm Exam 30% Final Exam 30% Daily Activity Grades will include: Discussion Boards, Group Presentations, Assignments, Case studies, Quizzes, Specialty Exams, Research Paper Assignments, etc.
Course assignment submissions must be submitted correctly with Blackboard. A student will be allowed one submission per semester to be cleared by course instructor. Any further incorrect submissions will result in a zero for the assignment submission.
Final exams are not available for review by the student and Final exam grades are not posted. ompletion of PassPoint Mastery Level assignments are some of the mandatory Pass/Fail assignments.
All Pass/Fail Assignments must be completed in a satisfactory manner or it will result in a course failure.
A final course grade of 75% and successful completion of ALL Pass/Fail assignments is necessary for a student to pass this course.
The course faculty will explain course requirements which will include required assignments and specific dates for work to be turned in that must be met by the student. Unless an assignment is turned in by the deadline there will be a late penalty deducted for lateness. In most courses the late penalty will be a deduction of ten points if turned in within the first 24 hours after the assignment due date. If the assignment is turned in between 24 and 48 hours late a 25-point penalty will be deducted. Any assignment submitted after 48 hours will be assigned a zero for the assignment. Previous arrangements between the student and faculty for late work may allow for a reduced late point penalty, but all late submissions will have a late penalty deducted. There are also assignments that if not submitted by the assigned due date a grade of zero will be assigned. Refer to the individual course syllabus or the assignment for any variations from the late penalty deductions.
Many of the courses also include assignments that are designated as a mandatory Pass/Fail course assignment. If these assignments are not completed satisfactorily the student may fail not only the assignment but also the course.
Late submission of the mandatory Pass/Fail assignments will result in late point penalties. In most courses the late penalty will be a deduction of ten points if turned in within the first 24 hours after the assignment due date. If the assignment is turned in between 24 and 48 hours late a 25-point penalty will be deducted.
Any Pass/Fail assignment submitted after 48 hours will be assigned a grade of five points for the assignment. Previous arrangements between the student and faculty for late work may allow for a reduced late point penalty, but all late submissions will have a late penalty deducted.
Late arrival to class is disruptive. Students who consistently arrive after the scheduled starting time of class (2 or more times) will be counseled and a plan of action determined. Class will begin promptly at the scheduled time. Students who arrive ten (10) minutes after the beginning of class should not enter the classroom and should wait until break to enter. A student tardy for two or more times will receive a 5-point deduction on the next exam. This tardy period resets after each exam.
Late arrival to exams is very disruptive and disrespectful to your peers. Please arrive in time to be seated and signed into the exam portal no later than the scheduled exam time. Late exam arrival may result in a five-point deduction on the exam. |
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Course Policies | |||||||||
Instructor Policies |
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Attendance Policy |
Attendance at all scheduled classes and clinical experiences is expected. Research has shown that consistent class and clinical attendance contributes to successful completion of not only the Upward Mobility Nursing Program, but also passing the NCLEX-RN. Regular attendance is an essential function of any job in nursing. Students who regularly miss class or clinical clearly demonstrate their refusal to be accountable to report to work regularly.
Students are expected to attend all online course sessions that occur during scheduled course times. These sessions will be scheduled in advance and may have activities during the live session that result in a grade. Students who do not attend are counted as absent and will not have the opportunity to make up any missed assignment during the live class session.
Students who do not attend scheduled live virtual activities will be counted as absent.
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Additional Information |
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Institutional Policies | |||||||||
MyLSCPA | Be sure to check your campus email and Course Homepage using MyLSCPA campus web portal. You can also access your grades, transcripts, academic advisors, degree progress, and other services through MyLSCPA. | ||||||||
Academic Honesty | Academic honesty is expected from all students, and dishonesty in any form will not be tolerated. Please consult the LSCPA policies (Academic Dishonesty section in the Student Handbook) for consequences of academic dishonesty. | ||||||||
ADA Considerations | The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is a federal anti-discrimination statute that provides comprehensive civil rights for persons with disabilities. Among other things, this legislation requires that all students with disabilities be guaranteed a learning environment that provides for reasonable accommodation of their disabilities. If you believe you have a disability requiring an accommodation, please contact the Disability Services Coordinator, Room 117, in the Student Sucess Center. The phone number is (409) 984-6241. | ||||||||
COVID 19 Information | The Lamar State College Port Arthur (LSCPA) Student Code of Conduct COVID 19 Policy requires students who have been diagnosed with COVID 19 to report their condition directly to their local health department. Students should also contact their course faculty to report their quarantine status. In addition, this policy requires all students to wear face coverings when directly exposed to COVID 19 in compliance with the criteria included in the policy. For more information please refer to the COVID 19 link on the LSCPA website. | ||||||||
Facility Policies | No food or tobacco products are allowed in the classroom. Only students enrolled in the course are allowed in the classroom, except by special instructor permission. Use of electronic devices is prohibited. | ||||||||
HB 2504 | This syllabus is part of LSCPA's efforts to comply with Texas House Bill 2504. | ||||||||
Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse and Neglect | As per Texas law and LSCPA policy, all LSCPA employees, including faculty, are required to report allegations or disclosures of child abuse or neglect to the designated authorities, which may include a local or state law enforcement agency or the Texas Department of Family Protective Services. For more information about mandatory reporting requirements, see LSCPA's Policy and Procedure Manual. | ||||||||
Title IX and Sexual Misconduct | LSCPA is committed to establishing and maintaining an environment that is free from all forms of sex discrimination, including sexual harassment, sexual violence, and other forms of sexual misconduct. All LSCPA employees, including faculty, have the responsibility to report disclosures of sexual misconduct, including sexual harassment, sexual assault (including rape and acquaintance rape), domestic violence, dating violence, relationship violence, or stalking, to LSCPA's Title IX Coordinator, whose role is to coordinate the college's response to sexual misconduct. For more information about Title IX protections, faculty reporting responsibilities, options for confidential reporting, and the resources available for support visit LSCPA's Title IX website. | ||||||||
Clery Act Crime Reporting |
For more information about the Clery Act and crime reporting, see the Annual Security & Fire Safety Report and the Campus Security website. |
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Grievance / Complaint / Concern | If you have a grievance, complaint, or concern about this course that has not been resolved through discussion with the Instructor, please consult the Department Chair. | ||||||||
Department Information |
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