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Bachelor of Science in Nursing

Empowering the next generation of nursing leaders  

The path to becoming a registered nurse takes commitment and teamwork. Loyola is preparing to welcome its first class of Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) students in Fall 2025. As a nursing student at Loyola University Maryland, you will build the critical reasoning and empathy necessary to engage with individuals of many backgrounds and perspectives. You will reflect deeply on ethics and what it means to dedicate oneself to the art and science of nursing. And you will acquire the complex skills, cultural sensitivity, teamwork, and commitment to life-long learning that ensure a successful profession as a registered nurse.

Loyola’s innovative BSN degree program is uniquely designed to integrate our exceptional liberal arts foundation with a holistic nursing education, steeped in the Jesuit tradition of care and social justice. Education in direct patient care includes a wide range of clinical rotations at our nursing education partner, Mercy Medical Center, a hospital recognized nationally for nursing excellence. Loyola’s upcoming BSN program offers a transformative learning environment focused on student success and providing the foundations of didactic and clinical learning. 

The Maryland Higher Education Commission (MHEC) has approved Loyola’s BSN program and Loyola University Maryland has moved on to the review by the Maryland Board of Nursing (MBON). Upon the MBON approval, we are preparing to welcome our first BSN cohort in Fall of 2025. 

A nurse and a student working on an ultrasound machineA student and Loyola administrator walking in Mercy hospital

Contact Us

Questions about the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) Program?

Email Maiju Lehmijoki Wetzel, Ph.D., BSN, R.N., Director of Loyola’s Pre-Health Programs, at nursing@loyola.edu. 

Program Highlights
Clinical Training through our Partnership with Mercy Medical Center
Mercy Medical Center, an anchor institution in Baltimore City for 150 years, will provide the setting for your clinical training as you progress through your nursing rotations. Mercy’s excellence in nursing is recognized with a coveted American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) Magnet designation, a distinction held by fewer than 10% of U.S. hospitals, demonstrating Mercy Medical Center's high standards for exemplary nursing practices.
Comprehensive Curriculum
Our BSN program offers a robust curriculum that balances core nursing competencies and evidence-based nursing practices with Loyola’s rigorous liberal arts education. With clinical learning opportunities, state-of-the-art science laboratories, and our forthcoming simulation lab, you will put theory into practice and be ready to meet the diverse needs of patients in various health care settings.
Clear Path to a Nursing Career
Loyola’s successful BSN degree program applicants are accepted directly to the BSN program, a distinction from many other undergraduate nursing programs. Your nursing-specific courses begin with a professional development seminar during the first week you arrive on campus. You will build confidence in your nursing competencies over all four years of your college experience. Loyola’s rigorous education is grounded in the natural sciences and liberal arts, nursing theory, and nursing clinicals. One-on-one academic advising and support will prepare you for success with the National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX). You will amplify your clinical judgment and compassionate delivery of care through goal setting, observation, practice, feedback, self-evaluation, and reflection.
Instruction from Dedicated Faculty and Practitioners
Loyola students benefit from small class sizes (our student-to-faculty ratio is 12:1) and the mentorship and guidance of our dedicated, interdisciplinary faculty—teacher-scholars and clinical leaders who are experts in their fields. Your classes, skills training, and clinicals create a balanced framework for learning in which knowledge meets practice, creating unmatched competency for your future as a registered nurse.
A Degree Centered on Values
Loyola’s BSN program emphasizes the Jesuit values of cura personalis (care for the whole person), social justice, and ethical responsibility. These principles are woven throughout your coursework and clinical experiences, ensuring that our nursing graduates are skilled professionals who are also compassionate caregivers and principled leaders.

Curriculum and Learning Aims

Our BSN program offers a robust curriculum that balances core nursing competencies with Loyola’s exceptional liberal arts education.

Explore the curriculum
Students working in a lab

Sample Courses

  • Nursing Professional Development in Clinical Judgment
  • Life Span Development
  • Bioethics
  • Human Nutrition
  • Human Anatomy and Physiology + Laboratory
  • Mental Health Promotion and Psychiatric Nursing + Clinical
  • Fundamentals of Nursing + Clinical
  • Pathophysiology
  • Pharmacology Clinical Laboratory
  • Nursing Care of Adults and Older Adults + Clinical
  • Maternal Health and Childbearing + Clinical
  • Transition into Professional Nursing Clinical
  • Leadership and Management in Nursing + Clinical

 

 

 

FAQ

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Admission Process and Policies

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Statements and Disclosures

The nursing program at Loyola University Maryland has received approval from the Maryland Higher Education Commission (MHEC). Upon graduation of the first nursing class in May 2029, we are eligible to submit for approved status. The launch of this new degree program awaits final approval from the Maryland Board of Nursing and is expected to be available for students beginning in the Fall of 2025. 

Accreditation

Loyola University’s baccalaureate degree in nursing is pursuing initial accreditation by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education in 2026. Our application for accreditation does not guarantee that accreditation will be granted.

Eligibility for Licensure as a Registered Nurse

Any applicant for initial licensure as a registered nurse who has a criminal conviction(s) and/or past or pending disciplinary action against a professional/trade/license/certificate should contact the Board of Registration in Nursing in the state in which he/she plans to practice to determine if his/her court record or disciplinary action will be a barrier to eligibility for licensure as a registered nurse. Please note: a previous court conviction does not automatically preclude someone from eligibility for licensure as a registered nurse. However, if someone falsifies a statement concerning a felony or misdemeanor conviction on the license application, and it is later discovered, the individual could be denied practicing in nursing for the remainder of his/her life.

Professional Nursing Licensure Disclosure

The Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) Program at Providence College has initial approval by the Rhode Island Board of Nurse Registration. The BSN Program is in compliance with 216 RICR-40-05-3, Title 216 – Department of Health, Chapter 40 – Professional Licensing and Facility Regulation, Subchapter 05- Professional Licensing, Part 3 – Licensing of Nursing and Standards for the Approval of Basic Nursing Education Programs. and will prepare students to take the national licensure examination for registered nurses (NCLEX-RN®). Individuals graduating from the program will meet the requirements for licensure in the state of Rhode Island and will be able to take the NCLEX-RN®.  

Passing the NCLEX-RN® is a requirement for licensure in all 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia and U.S. territories. Additional licensure requirements may vary widely from state to state including, but not limited to, the number of required clinical hours, specific coursework, documentation verifying citizenship (i.e. social security number) as well as criminal background checks/fingerprinting. Providence College has not yet made a determination of whether the nursing program’s curriculum meets educational requirements for licensure in the remaining 49 states, District of Columbia or U.S. territories.

It is the student’s responsibility to contact the agency in the state in which they wish to pursue licensure to determine/confirm whether Loyola University Maryland’s BSN program meets the requirements for professional licensure in that state.

To obtain the contact information for the nursing professional licensing boards or to review your state’s licensure requirements, please visit the National Council of State Boards of Nursing.  

Contact Us

For more information, please contact [need email address].  

Our mission is to educate and inspire future nurses to learn, lead, and serve in a diverse and changing world in the tradition of our Jesuit, Catholic commitment to the whole person and excellence in learning. Our graduates will be prepared to exercise clinical judgment and provide patient-centered care in all health care settings and across the span of human life, with particular emphasis on serving the medically underserved.
Our students will achieve a dynamic and competency-based education that integrates critical thinking and clinical decision-making into a wide range of professional nursing circumstances. Our multidisciplinary learning environment fosters adept practitioners who become valued members and leaders of interprofessional teams. Your education as a future registered nurse begins during your first week at Loyola, allowing you to fully integrate your identity as a member of the vocation that for many years has been voted as the most trusted profession in the country.
Loyola is a proven leader, known for graduates who excel in the sciences. At our Jesuit, Catholic liberal arts university, our students also benefit from a rich, values-based core curriculum that helps them become the ethical, compassionate, analytical leaders needed in health care.