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Spring 2008
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Department: On the Pulse | Next Story > A Road to Excellence: A Letter from China
As
students in the second cohort of this joint program between the Johns
Hopkins University School of Nursing and Peking Union Medical College,
it was difficult when we first arrived in Baltimore in late July due to
jet lag, language problems, culture shock, and worries about not being
able to keep up with the study here.
But
fortunately we got a strong support from JHUSON. Professor Marie Nolan, PhD,
RN was responsible for our academic arrangement, and Susan Bullock from the
Office of Global Nursing handled our schedule arrangement. Our Hopkins
advisors encouraged us with praise and academic guidance, and everyone
inside of the PhD research room was also so nice and helpful.
We had
five required courses: "Dissertation seminar," "Writing for Publication,"
"Measurement in Health Care Research," "Academic English," and "Issues and
Trends for Global Health." Those courses were intriguing, informative, and
interactive. We could ask questions at any time, or even make appointments
with teachers.
One of our
emphases here was to finish the dissertation proposal. We wrote reviews, had
discussions with our advisers, and gave each other suggestions also. Even
the hour before the final proposal presentation we were still making some
modifications. Fortunately the success of our presentations made all those
efforts worthwhile.
In
October, faculty, staff and students attended our presentation on Chinese
culture. They were so interested--even in elevators there were people asking
us about the content of the presentations!
Also we
attended meetings, visited lots of centers and institutions, and spent
Thanksgiving with professor Maryann Fralic, DrPH, RN, FAAN. All those
activities brought us unforgettable knowledge and joys.
At the
closing dinner banquet in Dean Martha Hill's house, we commented that "Five
months may not be long enough, but it is important enough to change our
whole lives." The time spent at JHUSON not only taught us how to learn, how
to teach, and how to conduct research--more importantly, it showed us how to
combine excellence and diversity in nursing science.
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