Sept. 30, 2019
Schumacher 2019: Five alumni reflect on the last 50 years of UCalgary Nursing
Nurses have always used their education, creativity and experience to develop solutions to improve the care of their patients. You can call them âentreprenursesâ as theyâre uniquely qualified as health-care innovators and change agents.
On Sept. 28, in honour of the Faculty of Nursingâs 50th anniversary as a nursing school, five alumni speakers, one from each decade, addressed the crowd for the Marguerite Schumacher Memorial Alumni Lecture titled From Nurse to EntrepreNurse: Personal reflections from 50 years of UCalgary Nursing. More than 90 people were in attendance at The Ranchmen's Club.
UCalgary President Ed McCauley brought his welcoming remarks, noting, âThis is a special event for our campus family because it celebrates the important legacy of the Faculty of Nursing.
âWith all the nursing graduates in the nursing community, youâve built on 50 years of excellence and expanded our impact. We have a lot to celebrate.âÂ
- Photo above:Â From left, speakers Shannon Spenceley, Suzanna Crawford, Dianne Dyer, Derek Luk, and Pam Nordstrom. Faculty of Nursing photo
Each speaker shared their personal stories about opportunities created through their education, by their workplaces and experiences and their own personal drive to help transform our health system. They brought personal perspectives on the continued evolution of the nursing profession and the opportunities this transformation creates in areas like social enterprise, community-based research and experiential learning.
Dianne Dyer, BNâ76, MNâ93, past president of the , shared her memories of the early days in the Faculty of Nursing and images of the early nursing uniforms. âAt the time, we didnât have fancy simulation labs,â she said. âWe even practised a lot of our skills on each other.â
Pam Nordstrom, BNâ83, who is now vice-president, academic affairs at Ambrose University, began her nursing career in neonatal intensive care and neonatal transport. She quipped, âEighties nurses were entreprenurses before entreprenurses were even a thing.â
As the '90s graduate, Shannon Spenceley, MNâ93, another former CARNA president, spoke about how nursing practice is all about seeing problems as pathways. âEntrepreneurship is a mindset,â she said, adding that âif thereâs something an entreprenurse is, itâs someone whoâs non-compliant.â She described her education at UCalgary Nursing as her launchpad; sheâs now assistant dean, nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Lethbridge.
Derek Luk, BNâ07, delved into the topics of failure and focus around starting his company, , which offers mindfulness programs in the workplace and community. He stressed the importance of trying and failing and persistence: âYou have no idea what youâre capable of until you try.â
The final speaker of the night was Suzanna Crawford, BScâ11, BNâ13, who co-founded , a social enterprise matching people with disabilities to support workers.
âENABLE was borne out of equal parts passion and equal parts frustration,â she says. Crawford shared how her experiences as an RN with Psychiatric Emergency Services at the Alberta Childrenâs Hospital and working with people with disabilities in the community as a support worker showed her the gap for families affected by disability, inspiring her to start her business.
This was the sixth year for the Faculty of Nursingâs annual memorial alumni lecture named after Marguerite Schumacher, the first dean of the nursing faculty at the ÁùŸĆÉ«ÌĂ (1974â1979).
Newly appointed alumni executive co-presidents Karla Sanchez, BNâ17, BScâ13, and Zeeyaan Somani, BNâ18, were MCs for the evening.
For the full photo album from the evening, check out the