The Helene Fuld College of Nursing is an American private, nonsectarian institution of higher learning that offers associate and comprehensive baccalaureate science degrees as continuing education to Licensed Practical and Registered Nurses who aspire to elevate their academic and professional credentials. The college is located in New York City in the East Harlem section of Manhattan in the Mount Morris Park Historic District at Marcus Garvey Park. It was founded seventy-two years ago - in 1945.
Video Helene Fuld College of Nursing
Admissions and curriculum
The college offers two continuing education programs:
- The college offers a program for licensed practical nurses and registered nurses who desire to earn associate degrees at the registered nurse level.
- The college also offers a baccalaureate degree program for registered nurses with associate degrees.
On May 2, 2014, the college made history by conferring its first Bachelor of Science degrees.
Maps Helene Fuld College of Nursing
Enrollment
As of 2017, there were approximately 450 full- and part-time students enrolled in the associate degree and upper division baccalaureate programs.
Honors program
The Honors Program -- now in its ninth year (founded in February 2010) -- was established to enhance academic enrichment for exceptional students in the LPN to RN Associate degree program -- and to officially recognize and support their collegiate achievements. Honorees are selected bi-annually -- in February and August. The selection process is based on pre-entrance test scores, grades received in the pre-admission math/chemistry course, professional references, and faculty reviews. All candidates must have a minimum of a 3.75 GPA (out of 4) at the end of the first quarter to qualify and must maintain a 3.5 GPA overall until graduation to continue in the honors program.
Academic calendar
The Helene Fuld College of Nursing follows the quarter system.
Charter, accreditation, and affiliations
Charter and registration
- The college holds a permanent charter from the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York authorizing it to grant Associate in Applied Science and Bachelor of Science degrees.
- The college is registered by the New York State Education Department, Office of the Professions, located in Albany at the State Education Building.
Accreditation
- The college is accredited by the Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools (MSCHE)
- The associate degree nursing program is accredited by the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing, Inc. (ACEN)
- The upper division baccalaureate program (RN to BS) is accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE)
Regional affiliations
- Member, Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities in New York
- Member, Council for Associate Degree Nursing in New York State, Inc.
- Member, Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, the Greater New York Chamber of Commerce
- Member, New York Metropolitan Reference and Research Library Agency, founded in 1966
National affiliations
- Member, National League for Nursing
Facilities
College building
The College, since 1992, and as of 2017, occupies 34,000 square feet (3,200 m2) on the third and fourth floors of a wing owned by Bethel Gospel Assembly Church, an evangelical church. The college is not affiliated with the church. The classroom facilities, reportedly, are well equipped. But the building - particularly the entrance - has a no-frills, unassuming, utilitarian appearance. As was the case with North General Hospital, the decision to remain in the neighborhood represents a civic commitment to Harlem.
Rankings
- 2016: Ranked 1st in the United States among 821 Community Colleges by WalletHub. The ranking compared 821 community colleges in the United States. The criteria was based on data that included costs (including tuition), graduation rate, and quality of post-graduate jobs.
- 2017: Ranked 1st in "Best Community & Career Colleges by Salary Potential" in the "College Salary Report - 2017-18 Full List of 2-Year Schools," by PayScale
History
Constituent school of the Hospital for Joint Diseases
A school of nursing was founded October 15, 1945, by New York City's Hospital for Joint Diseases, offering a one-year curriculim leading to becoming a Licensed Practical Nurse. Its inaugural class graduated October 29, 1946. By 1950, the program was named "Hospital for Joint Diseases School of Practical Nursing".
The school, in 1955, received a grant from the Helene Fuld Health Foundation and was subsequently named the "Helene Fuld School of Practical Nursing".
In 1964, under the leadership of Justine Hannan, RN, Director of Nursing Services and Nursing Education, the school launched the first program in the country to offer licensed practical nurses an accredited curriculum in higher education leading to a degree as a Registered nurse. In 1973, Mary Ahl-Heugel (née Mary Ellen Ahl; born 1918), PhD, RN, became Director of Nursing Education. In 1976, the school received a permanent charter from New York State with the authority to confer the Associate degrees in Applied Science with a nursing concentration, becoming one of the first hospital-based schools in New York State to offer the associate degree.
In 1978, the school phased out its practical nurse program. The last class of about 300 in practical nursing graduated in October 1978.
In 1979 the Hospital for Joint Diseases relocated downtown on East 17th Street and a new, private, non-profit corporation named "Joint Diseases North General Hospital" became the new tenant at 1919 Madison Avenue location in East Harlem. Helene Fuld College of Nursing had been, since October 15, 1945, a New York State Registered Nursing School.
Constituent college of North General Hospital
In 1980, Margaret Wines, PhD, RN, became Dean. In 1981, the school's associate degree program became the first such hospital program to be accredited by the National League for Nursing. On October 27, 1987, the hospital was renamed North General Hospital. In 1988, the school became the first hospital-based nursing school to become accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.
On December 12, 1991, North General Hospital moved into a newly built, modern facility at 1879 Madison Avenue, between 120th and 121st Streets, two blocks south of its old location. In 1992, the Helene Fuld School of Nursing moved into its current location at 24 East 120th Street, New York.
In February 1996, with the permission of the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York, the name "Helene Fuld School of Nursing" was changed to "Helene Fuld College of Nursing", reflecting the depth and breadth its curricular programs in higher education.
Independent college
In July 2007, the College separated from North General hospital and amended its charter with the New York State Board of Regents as an independent not-for-profit college. North General Hospital - its former parent institution - closed July 2, 2010, and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In 2012, Wendy Robinson, PhD, RN, became President of the College and the New York State Education Department authorized the College to confer Bachelor of Science degrees for registered nurses.
Colors
The college uses blue, green, purple, and black in its publications. Moreover, the interior design color palette of the college's main reception area uses those colors. With the exception of black, nurses commonly wear scrubs in those colors. Since 2010, there has been a growing trend for hospitals and health care organizations to assign scrub color codes to help identify healthcare professional by discipline or department. Color coded uniforms, however, have been widely criticized by healthcare workers for various reasons, one being that it cultivates a caste mentality in an environment that requires teamwork across all disciplines. In any event, the colors at the college do not represent a particular discipline or academic level.
Selected people
Neighborhood
The immediate neighborhood, until about 1992, had been blighted. This was the case with many neighborhoods and districts throughout the five boroughs. In 1992, when North General Hospital moved into its new quarters two blocks south, Maple Plaza, an eight-story, 155-unit residential co-op, designated for affordable housing, was built in its place at 1919 Madison Avenue. Maple Plaza was developed in the 1990s under a plan by the city and North General Hospital to revive the area around the hospital. Eugene Louis McCabe (1937-1998), President and CEO of North General Hospital from its inception in 1979 until his death in 1998, was a strong advocate of developing Maple Plaza. Maple Court, another similar project in the area with 135 units, was completed before Maple Plaza. Since then, the area around Garvey Park has developed. The neighborhood is no longer blighted. While gentrification is typically criticized by civic leaders for making neighborhoods unaffordable - particularly to those who, for generations have thrived and lived there - the neighborhood surrounding Garvey Park, by design, offers a mix of affordable housing. At the same time, adjusting to gentrification throughout Harlem is an ongoing concern of policy makers, citizens, civic leaders, and religious leaders.
Two blocks west of the college, in the Mount Morris Park Historic District, there has been considerable recent (since 2000) residential development and restoration. The stretch of 122nd Street between Mount Morris Park West and Malcolm X Boulevard (aka Sixth Avenue and Lenox Avenue) is known as "Doctors' Row". As has been the case in many neighborhoods throughout the five boroughs, old, historic residential buildings, including brownstones, fell into disrepair. Until around 1999, on Mount Morris Park West, between 120 and 121st Streets, there was a row of brownstones, built around 1885, which, according to the New York Times, were so deteriorated that they came known as "The "Ruins". That row has been completely rebuilt into luxury condominiums that were initially priced for mixed income buyers. Revitalization since the 1990s has occurred in many neighborhoods, including the Mount Morris Park Historic District, notably brownstones, and in particular the brownstones at 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, and 16 West 122nd Street, on the south side of the street, which date back to 1888 and 1889. Those particular brownstones were designed by William Tuthill. St. Martin's Episcopal Church, featuring a tower that houses the city's second largest carillon (40 bells), is at 18 West 122nd Street - at the corner of Malcolm X Boulevard. It is a New York City Designated Landmark.
"Fifth on the Park," Harlem's first Upper East Side-style high-rise condominium tower is one block east from the college, at the southeast corner of 120th Street and Fifth Avenue - at 1485 Fifth Avenue. Its architects are FxFowle. The tower, 28 stories, 26 of which are residential, includes a 38,000 square foot (3,500 m2) church with a four-story, 1,800-seat sanctuary for the Bethel Gospel Assembly, who sold the development rights for a full block. There are 194 residences, of which 47 are church-owned affordable rental apartments, and 147 are market-rate condominiums. The spa includes a 55 foot (16.76 m) lap pool.
Neighborhood amenities
Concerns over gentrification notwithstanding, within a few blocks, on Martin Luther King Boulevard (125th Street), several specialty retailers opened in 2017, including Whole Foods Market and Bed, Bath, and Beyond. Marcus Samuelsson's popular restaurant, the Red Rooster, is a half block north of Whole Foods.
Madison Avenue, between 119th and 120th Streets, runs along the east side of the Helene Fuld College of Nursing. The stretch of Madison Avenue that runs from 118th to 124th streets is named Eugene McCabe Way, in honor of Eugene Louis McCabe (1937-1998), President, CEO, and co-founder of North General Hospital. Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani signed a bill dedicating it in McCabe's name about a year after his death.
In 2001, New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Commissioner Henry J. Stern re-named an athletic field in the area "Eugene McCabe Field." The field is adjacent to P.S. 79, and bounded by Park Avenue, East 120th Street and East 121st Street. In October 2001, a large scale renovation of the field, costing $1.887 million, was completed. It features a new athletic field with synthetic turf and a backstops for soccer and softball.
Vocational perspective timeline
In 1964, there were 700 practical nursing schools in the United States, but only 80 that were associated with hospitals. The rest were in high schools. At the time, 30,000, were studying to be practical nurses. The number should have been 300,000, according to critics. In schools for registered nurses, 123,861 were enrolled. Not enough, according to critics. In 1964, Helene Fuld School of Nursing was cited as being among top schools for practical nursing, along with Sinai Hospital in Detroit, St. Mary's Hospital in Pierre, South Dakota, Lemuel Shattuck Hospital in Boston, Mount Sinai in Miami Beach.
Locally, the Harlem Hospital School of Nursing, founded in 1923, closed in 1977.
Selected publications
- Practical Nursing Today (1957); OCLC 950057078
-
- By Elisabeth Cogswell Phillips (1902-2001), Margaret Candace Esau (1910-1997), Eleanor A. Tourtillott (1909-2002), Kathryn Goodman Frenzos, Barbara Rafter Fallon (1916-2007) - daughter of famed New York attorney William J. Fallon
- Edited by Cordelia W. Kelly (née Cordelia Wood; 1905-1966) (ed.)
- New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons; Toronto: McAinsh and Co. Ltd.
- Marilyn Gottehrer Freedman and Justine Hannan, Medical-Surgical Workbook for Practical Nurses, F.A. Davis Co. (1960); OCLC 957167203
- Marilyn Gottehrer Freedman and Justine Hannan, Medical-Surgical Workbook for Practical Nurses (2nd ed.), F.A. Davis Co. (1964); OCLC 774599098
- Marilyn Gottehrer Freedman, RN, M.A., and Justine Hannan, RN, M.A., Clinical Workbook for Practical Nurses (3rd ed.), F.A. Davis Co. (1968); OCLC 636919548
-
- Ryerson Press was the Canadian agent for F.A. Davis Co.
- Biographical note on co-author: Marilyn Gottehrer Freedman (née Marilyn Theodora Gottehrer; 1928-2008), in 1957, married Lawrence Freedman; Marilyn Freedman had served as Director of Education at the Helene Fuld School of Nursing.
- "Perceptions of Nurse and Physician Educational Administrators in New York State Concerning the Compatibility of Selected Nurse Activities with the 1972 Legal Definition of Nursing" (PhD dissertation), by Mary Ellen Ahl, St. John's University (1975); OCLC 648376689
- "Patient Anxiety Before Cardiac Catheterization: An Intervention Study," by M Peterson, Helene Fuld School of Nursing, North General Hospital, New York, New York, Heart & Lung: The Journal of Critical Care, Vol. 20, No. 6, November 1991, pps. 643-647; OCLC 117231751; ISSN 0147-9563
-
- Note: To increase access to cardiac catheterization for residents of East and Central Harlem, a cardiac catheterization laboratory was opened in 2005 at North General Hospital.
Other schools by the same name
- The Helene Fuld School of Nursing in Trenton, New Jersey, was founded in 1895 as "Training School for Nurses" at Trenton City Hospital. The hospital and school changed their names in 1902 to William McKinley Memorial Hospital and William McKinley Memorial Hospital School of Nursing. In 1951 school changed its name to Helene Fuld School of Nursing, honoring the mother of its benefactor, Leonhard Felix Fuld - the same benefactor as the Helene College of Nursing in New York City. The Trenton school closed in 2011, citing, among other things, changes in nursing education. The Trenton school was not related to the New York school.
- Coppin State University, College of Health Professions, Helene Fuld School of Nursing in Baltimore was founded in 1973 and, as of 2017, offers baccalaureate degrees for RN, BSN, accelerated BSN, and a graduate program that began in fall 1999. The School offers a Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) and a post-masters certification track with a Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) role concentration. From 1963 to 1973, it was known as the Helene Fuld School of Nursing at Provident Hospital. At its founding in 1895, it was named the Provident Hospital Training School of Nursing. Luci V. Ashton (1870-1948), who graduated from Freedmen's Hospital Training School for Nurses in 1895, served as the school's first director for a year and a half before becoming Superintendent of Nurses at Douglass Hospital in Kansas City, Kansas. The Baltimore school is not related to the New York School.
Notable alumni
- 1962: Dorothy A. Campbell, RN (retired) (née Dorothy Anne Patterson; born 1938), graduated from the Fuld College of Nursing in 1962. She is a poet and author. Her books include:
- Pearl - A Journey of a Lifetime, (2014)
- It Happened in Manhattan (2017), an autobiography wherein Campbell reflects upon, among other things, her experiences attending the Helene Fuld School of Nursing.
Selected commencement addresses
- 2014: Senator Charles Schumer, on May 2, 2014, spoke in recognition achievements by the graduates, and specifically acknowledged the important role of nursing in society. Schumer lauded the diversity of the student body and took note that many in the class were the first in their families to graduate from college. Boris Kodjoe gave the commencement address.
- 2017: Actor and author Hill Harper, on May 5, 2017, produced an informal commencement video for the spring graduation ceremony, prior to delivering the commencement address.
Notes and references
General
Notes
Books, magazines, journals, and videos
Newspapers
Source of article : Wikipedia