One of the wonderful things about life within a university is the pattern of the academic year. It鈥檚 unique in the way it ebbs and flows: familiar but never repetitive, a constant that鈥檚 always teeming with change. And while I鈥檓 grateful for the pattern as a whole, I鈥檓 particularly grateful for this moment in the year when we take stock of our recent achievements and look forward to the opportunities ahead.
As I reflect on this past academic year, I find myself thinking of our legacy as a Jesuit, Catholic institution. I think, too, about our future in an increasingly connected world where complex health systems continue to evolve. But mostly I think about how inspired I am by my colleagues here at Boston College, and by you鈥攎y colleagues in nursing and health.
I want to thank you for taking the time to read this and for looking at the information that follows. It seems that now, more than ever, our attention is the most valuable commodity we can give. Perhaps that鈥檚 what makes our beloved profession so universally trusted. Nurses pay attention. We dedicate ourselves to others. We listen. We care. We respect.
Wishing you health and wellness,聽
Katherine E. Gregory
Dean, Connell School of Nursing
A new Connell School undergraduate major, Global Public Health and the Common Good, launches in the fall, in partnership with the Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society.
The National League for Nursing (NLN) named CSON a 2022 NLN Center of Excellence for its success in faculty development, nursing education research, student learning, professional development, and academic progression in nursing.
CSON signed a memorandum of understanding with Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan College of Nursing in the Philippines to support academic and research collaboration between the two Jesuit nursing schools.
Interim Associate Dean for Graduate Programs Andrew Dwyer was named a Macy Faculty Scholar, joining a select cohort of educators in medicine and nursing in career development and implementation of a scholarly project.
The National Collaborative for Health Equity accepted Leah Gordon, associate dean for inclusive excellence, diversity, and belonging, into the second cohort of its Culture of Health Leaders Institute for Racial Healing, which is supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Associate Dean for Research Christopher S. Lee was named the Barry Family/Goldman Sachs Endowed Chair in Nursing, which was established by a gift from Boston College Trustee Associate Steven M. Barry 鈥85 and Tammy J. Barry 鈥85, M.Ed. 鈥87.
Associate Professor of the Practice Aimee Milliken, a national leader in nursing ethics, was profiled in a聽Boston College Magazine feature story.
Assistant Professor of the Practice Melissa P茅rez Capotosto was awarded a Diversity Supplement Grant from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
75TH ANNIVERSARY
The end of CSON鈥檚 75th anniversary year was marked by a celebration with a keynote presentation by Dean Katherine E. Gregory and a panel discussion with Brianna Cheatham 鈥22; Marsha Maurer, M.S. 鈥90, Karen Jennings Mathis, M.S. 鈥11, Ph.D. 鈥16; and Rolando Perea 鈥85.
SPRING PINNACLE LECTURE
Jennie Chin Hansen 鈥70, H鈥08, a nationally recognized thought leader on the health care needs of older adults, presented the spring Pinnacle lecture 鈥淩eflections and Projections: My Career at the Vanguard of Public Health Policy.鈥
FALL PINNACLE LECTURE
Angelleen Peters-Lewis, Ph.D. 鈥06, COO and chief聽nurse executive at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, presented the fall Pinnacle lecture 鈥淪eizing the Momentum: Elevating Nursing Post-Pandemic.鈥
DEAN RITA P. KELLEHER AWARD
Marsha Maurer, M.S. 鈥90, a former senior vice president of patient care services and chief nursing officer at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, received CSON鈥檚 Dean Rita P. Kelleher Award.
GRAND ROUNDS
CSON welcomed four speakers to its Grand Rounds lecture series to speak on topics including:
SYMPOSIUM: TRAUMA OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
Margaret Moss, Ph.D., J.D., RN, FAAN, gave the keynote address at the virtual symposium, Structural Determinants of Health: Trauma of the Indigenous People in North America. She is an enrolled member of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation and has equal lineage as Canadian Sioux/ Saskatchewan.聽She directs the聽First Nations House of Learning聽and is an associate professor of nursing at the University of British Columbia.
Speakers also discussed reducing violence, human trafficking, and implications for change in indigenous communities.
CSON resumed its international immersion and education trips for the first time since the start of the pandemic.