Kentucky’s New Nursing Career Pathway
A Clearer, Faster Route to Credentials and Degrees

News SREB News Release

Educators, employers create a seamless pipeline from high school to high-demand health careers

Atlanta, June 19, 2017 — A new nursing pathway in Kentucky will accelerate high school students’ attainment of industry-approved certifications, licensures and credentials, culminating in the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN).
 
Beginning the Bachelor of Science in Nursing in High School: How Kentucky Created a 120-Credit Hour Nursing Career Pathway describes how SREB spent a year working with a coalition of Kentucky educators and health care employers to develop a seamless sequence of courses and credentials that help students transition from high school to community and technical college programs, the BSN, and employment as nursing assistants, licensed practical nurses (LPNs) and registered nurses (RNs). 
 
Selected Kentucky high schools will pilot the pathway beginning in August 2017. High school students can earn between 26 and 51 credit hours from Jefferson Community and Technical College, which offers the program’s first 90 hours. Students will earn the last 30 of 120 hours hours from Spalding University’s online RN to BSN program.
 
The new nursing pathway promises to shorten students’ time to a BSN degree. As the report notes, a Kentucky high school student who follows the state’s older pre-nursing curriculum might earn up to 168 credits in pursuit of the BSN, 48 credits more than a typical 120-credit hour BSN program.
 
Origins of the Pathway
 

Kentucky’s new nursing pathway grew out of a fall 2015 meeting at which SREB convened state policymakers, business leaders and education leaders around the shared goal of building career pathways leading from high school to rewarding jobs in high-growth industries.
 
“This pathway is a strong example of how community and technical colleges and high schools can come together to prepare students with the knowledge, skills and credentials the health care industry values,” said SREB’s Tim Shaughnessy, who worked with Kentucky’s partners to build the pathway. “All of the pathway’s components already existed. Our goal at SREB was to find the time, resources and commitment to bring all the partners together.”
 
Pathway Partners

 
Pathway partners included SREB, the Kentucky Department of Education, the Health Careers Collaborative of Greater Louisville, JCTC, the Kentucky Community & Technical College System, the Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet, and Spalding University. 
 
Partners agreed that a key goal was to make the pathway effective, affordable and sustainable.
 
“Employers and educators worked together to strengthen an existing pathway and provide enhanced dual credit and work-based learning opportunities,” said Laura Arnold, KDE’s Associate Commissioner of Career and Technical Education. “This nursing pathway is just one of many steps the state is taking to create a stronger career preparation system and a talented workforce.”
 
Beginning the Bachelor of Science in Nursing in High School also highlights instructional strategies for career pathways and offers actions states can take to support pathways in nursing, health care and other high-demand fields. In particular, states should consider carefully whether performance-based funding systems, dual credit and credit transfer policies, state scholarships and teacher credentialing policies support pathway models like Kentucky’s 120-credit hour nursing pathway.