| “Ambition and determination
are not enough.”
Erin
Szpara has big goals—goals that will help her make important
contributions in her chosen field of health care. Now, a donor's
generosity has provided her with the means to start achieving those
goals. Erin is a student in UW-Eau Claire's collaborative nursing
program, in which individuals with R.N. degrees return to school
to earn B.S.N. degrees. But she doesn't plan to stop there. She'd
like to become a nurse practitioner and eventually complete a Ph.D.
in nursing research. These once unattainable dreams are now one
step closer to reality, thanks to the support Erin's received through
the William Bartlett Native American Collaborative Nursing Scholarship.
Q&A with Erin Szpara:
Basic
information: Nursing major at UW-Eau Claire; registered
nurse in the cardiology unit at Luther Hospital, Eau Claire; 2002
recipient of the William Bartlett Native American
Collaborative Nursing Scholarship.
Why I chose UW-Eau Claire:
UW-Eau Claire is conveniently located, and it offers advanced nursing
degrees. Also, several nurses who are very influential in my life
and practice (whether they are aware of it or not) either are attending
graduate school at UW-Eau Claire, have completed the graduate program,
are School of Nursing faculty or have been faculty.
My postgraduation goals:
I plan to become an adult nurse practitioner, with the intention
of maintaining my practice in cardiology at Luther Midelfort-Mayo
here in Eau Claire. Eventually I would like to complete a Ph.D.
in nursing research.
How donors’ generosity
has made a difference in my life: Support that I’ve
received in the form of scholarships — the previous IHS scholarship
and the William Bartlett Native American Collaborative Nursing Scholarship
in particular — has enabled me to return to school and pursue
this dream of advanced degree, practice, and research that I otherwise
had no hope of ever achieving.
What I’d like to tell
my benefactors: I would like to thank my benefactors most
emphatically and without reserve for their generosity. Ambition
and determination are not enough, and it is your gifts that give
earnest and sincere nurses — present and future — the
means to better themselves. In doing so, the recipients of nursing
care, and indeed nursing itself, can only benefit. Investment in
nursing education is an investment in nursing and health care overall
— a thing we cannot afford leave underfunded at this extremely
and increasingly critical point in time.

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