Morrill Woman Stays Near Home, Receives UNMC Degree

Stephanie (Dolberg) Cannon first stepped onto the Omaha campus of UNMC

on Aug. 10.

One day later, the Morrill, Neb., resident received her diploma from

the university.  She completed her bachelor of science degree in Radiation

Science Technology from UNMC without ever coming to UNMCs Omaha campus.

The faculty at UNMC have gone out of their way to make this a possibility

for me, Cannon said. Im excited about the new opportunities that this

degree will provide for me.

Cannon earned her bachelors degree while working full time and living

in her hometown in western Nebraska.  She completed the Computed Tomography

and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (CT/MRI) program, one of several advanced

certification programs offered by the Division of Radiation Science Technology

Education at UNMC and the first to offer a distance learning opportunity. 

Their programs include Radiography, Nuclear Medicine Technology, Radiation

Therapy, Diagnostic Medical Sonography (Ultrasound), CT/MRI, and Cardiovascular

Interventional Technology (CVIT).

James Temme, director of radiation science education at UNMC, said providing

more distance-learning opportunities for students throughout the state

is a long-term goal of the division.

We feel that its important to provide these opportunities for the

citizens throughout the state, so that theyre able to stay in their communities

and still receive the same education as if they were in Omaha, Temme said.

There is a very real need out there because of the acute shortage of diagnostic

imaging technologists and radiation therapists.  This is part of our

attempt to help reduce that shortage.

A 1996 graduate of Morrill High School, Cannon said it had been a longtime

goal to receive a bachelors degree.  She earned an associates degree

from Western Nebraska Community College upon completion of the radiologic

technology program at Regional West Medical Center (RWMC) in Scottsbluff,

after which she was hired as a radiologic technologist at RWMC.

Still, she enjoyed performing CT scans and MRI exams, and wanted to

get more training in those areas.  There was one catch: No place around

Scottsbluff offered the training, and Cannon didnt want to leave her family

or her then-boyfriend Chris Cannon, a horse trainer who had recently moved

back to the area from Texas.

When he came back from Texas, we decided that we didnt want to have

any more of the long-distance relationship stuff, Stephanie Cannon said. 

The couple married in the summer of 2000.

But Cannon was presented with another option to attain her bachelors

degree.  The UNMC radiation science division had found ways to utilize

the distance-learning infrastructure that already existed in the state. 

The two-way communication satellite system, along with the development

of UNMC courses on the Internet and a qualified preceptor in Scottsbluff,

helped to persuade officials to give Cannon an opportunity through the

long-distance degree program.

Cannon said interacting with faculty members 500 miles away was difficult,

initially.

At first, it was kind of nerve-wracking, she said. The short delay

sometimes made it difficult to offer my input, but it got much better once

the professors and I became more comfortable with it Its not like being

in a classroom, but its a lot better than the course being on videotape.

Cannons program, which is designed to take a year once all other prerequisites

are completed, took her two years to complete from Scottsbluff, as she

continued to work full time in the radiology department at RWMC.

Dan Gilbert, the program director of the School of Radiologic Technology

at Regional West in Scottsbluff, served as Cannons preceptor during the

program.  Gilbert, certified in CT and MRI as well as Radiography,

CVIT, and Quality Management, provided the clinical instruction Stephanie

needed as well as collaborating with UNMCs CT/MRI Education Coordinator,

Adam Stevens, to provide her didactic instruction.

We couldnt have done this without Dan Gilberts assistance, said

Karen Nichols, distance education coordinator for the School of Allied

Health Professions at UNMC.  Having a local mentor was a key element

of Stephanies success.  It is especially important for distance learning

in the clinical setting.  Although we delivered much of Stephanies

coursework via distance from UNMC, Dan provided clinical and didactic instruction

on site.

Said Stevens: Dan was wonderful to work with, and Stephanie deserves

tremendous credit, as well. She was very patient and understanding as we

worked out some of the kinks in the system, and she was always dedicated

and hard-working. It was a tremendous pleasure to watch her receive her

diploma on Saturday.

Nichols has been working primarily with the radiation science programs,

and said she would like to eventually see all the advanced radiation science

modalities offered in Scottsbluff that are offered now in Omaha.

Students who receive their education in the rural setting are more

likely to continue working there after graduation, Nichols said. Nebraska

provides us with many challenges in that regard and the shortage of technologists

demands our attention.  Working with RWMC is a good start at addressing

these needs.

In about a month, UNMC faculty will start working toward that goal

when they travel to Scottsbluff to meet with representatives of the Regional

West Medical Center.  They are planning to begin a long-distance radiation

therapy program in Scottsbluff in 2002.

Temme said distance learning is an important avenue for the university

to pursue.

This is a trend in the industry, and we want to be one of the leaders

for distance education, he said. We wouldnt be able to do this without

a dedicated staff and the infrastructure that exists.

He said that UNMCs bachelors degree program makes the radiation science

technologists a more well-rounded patient-care provider and enhances the

competency of the graduate.

For Cannon, the bachelors degree not only fulfills a goal, but also

makes her more marketable.

With the training, Im a valuable commodity for any employer, she

said. I could get a job anywhere I want to go.