This year, four faculty with a wide range of expertise joined the team at the Connell School. These new community members bring a depth of experience in acute and psychiatric nursing, pediatric palliative care, and addressing fatigue in individuals with heart failure.
ELIZABETH BRODEN ARCIPRETE
Assistant Professor, Nursing
Nurse-led approaches to family grief in pediatric palliative care
M.H.S., Yale University
Ph.D., nursing, University of Pennsylvania
M.S., University of Pennsylvania
B.S., nursing, University of Pennsylvania
Postdoctoral Fellow, National Clinician Scholars Program, Yale School of Medicine
“The values here brought me. The opportunity to collaborate with students, faculty, and staff committed to a holistic, person- and justice-centered education is unparalleled within CSON and ۺŮ as a whole.”
Child Health Theory
What motivates your research?
“Nurses are present with families during some of the most intensely difficult and joyfulmoments during a child’s serious illness or injury. However, for nurses to attend to the fullspectrum of suffering, grief, and meaning that arises moment to moment during pediatricserious illness, we need readily applicable and adaptive tools.
“I worked with parents and healthcare providers to develop a handoff template that helps nurses communicate the child’s storyand the family’s needs to the incoming shift. The next step is designing, testing, andimplementing tools like this in partnership with bedside clinicians, nurses, and families.”
CEARA CONLEY
Assistant Professor of the Practice, Nursing
Acute care nursing and family nurse practitioner
D.N.P., family nursing practice, Boston College
B.S., nursing, University of Pittsburgh
Assistant Professor, Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences
Clinical Instructor, Boston College
“As a ۺŮ nursing grad, I have personally experienced CSON’s commitment to fostering an environment where students can grow and make an impact in the world. During my time volunteering with CSON’s health service trip to Jamaica and as a clinical instructor, I watched ۺŮ nurses make a difference at home and abroad, and I am excited to continue to be a part of this community.”
Adult Health Nursing Theory
Adult Health Nursing Clinical
What motivates your teaching?
“Nursing is more than mastering technical skills. I am dedicated to supporting the next generation of ۺŮ nurses as they learn to practice with a holistic, person-first approach to better serve their communities.”
NOELLE PAVLOVIC
Assistant Professor, Nursing
Fatigue symptoms in individuals at risk for and living with heart failure
Ph.D., nursing, Johns Hopkins University
M.S., nursing, Johns Hopkins University
M.S., microbiology and immunology, Georgetown University
B.A., biology, Oberlin College
Postdoctoral Fellow, Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
“I was first drawn to the faculty expertise in my area of research. But I was then really taken by CSON’s innovative mentorship structure that ensures faculty are well rounded in both teaching and scholarship. That aspect felt so purposeful and really reflected a deep dedication to the well-being of the student body and a desire to cultivate an encouraging, welcoming culture. The excitement about education here is so genuine and affirming.”
Nursing Assessment of Health
Adult Health Nursing Clinical
What motivates your research and teaching?
“Fatigue is one of the most common and distressing symptoms for those living with heart failure and can significantly impact quality of life. It’s a difficult symptom to address because it can have many underlying causes and often persists even after treatment. Symptoms like fatigue are central to the lived experience of acute and chronic disease. I believe that by better understanding and treating such symptoms, we can alleviate significant suffering and allow individuals living with heart failure to more fully and meaningfully engage in their lives.”
DANIELLE WALKER
Assistant Professorof the Practice, Nursing
Administrator and researcher who studies health equity, particularly among women experiencing homelessness and people with complex palliative care needs
Ph.D., nursing, Boston College
M.S., nursing, Boston College
B.S., nursing, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Instructor, MGH Institute of Health Professions
“As a graduate of ۺŮ, I knew the quality nursing education that is received here, and I wanted to be part of this community. The school’s commitment to social justice aligns strongly with my own priorities and values as a professor.”
Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Theory
Clinical Coordinator for Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing
What motivates your research and teaching?
“My goal is to make learning enjoyable. In the classroom I strive to use various methods of teaching to keep students engaged and connect theory to real-world clinical practice. Actively working in the field of mental health, I am able to bring to life the concepts I teach.”
