Student Experiences

Navajo Cultural Immersion Takes College of Nursing Students to New Heights

A three-credit hour elective Navajo Reservation Cultural Immersion course was the basis for a week long immersion at the 16-million-acre Navajo reservation in Arizona.  The trip was led by nursing faculty Sharon See and Cindy Dowds.  Prior to the immersion, students studied culture care theory and collected baseline holding knowledge of the Navajo people.

On the reservation students worked with home care nurses at Tsehootsooi Medical Center  in Fort Defiance and with children at the Navajo Youth Center in Window Rock. During one of their home visits, students were thrilled to meet Code Talker Wilford Buck. During World War II, the Code Talkers' primary job was to talk, transmitting information on tactics and troop movements, orders and other vital battlefield communications over telephones and radios.  Because they spoke in Navajo, the information was unintelligible to the Japanese.  Students went on many other memorable home visits.

Other highlights of the trip were holding two picnics for the children at the youth center, hiking the majestic Canyon De Chelly with a Navajo guide and visiting the hogan of traditional healer Aaron Sams. Throughout the immersion students took photos to be compiled for a photographic representation of the Purnell Model for Cultural Competence.  The poster was presented at the Transcultural Nursing Society Conference in Orlando in October 2012.

The course will be offered again in 2013.

Faculty Spotlight

Faculty
Melessa Starnes-Damoff is a professional instructor of nursing. She received her MS in nursing education from Walden University, her B.S. in nursing from Ashland University,... Read more