On a snowy Valentine鈥檚 Day weekend, while many of their classmates were celebrating or skiing, some 70 Connell School of Nursing sophomores spent two days off campus, reflecting on their experiences at Boston College, and the academic and professional transitions ahead.

It was the first-ever SCRUBS (Sophomore Connell Retreat for Undergraduate B.S. Students), a program of talks, contemplation, and conversation held February 12鈥14 at the Wonderland Conference Center in Sharon, Massachusetts. The inaugural retreat, a collaboration between the Center for Student Formation and the Connell School, featured presentations by professors, alumni, and upperclassmen, along with professional development workshops, small-group breakout discussions, and unstructured time for students to relax and recharge during the heart of the academic year.

Dean Susan Gennaro at the SCRUBS retreat

Dean Susan Gennaro

The idea for SCRUBS grew out of Dean Susan Gennaro鈥檚 annual year-end discussions with graduating Connell School students. In recent years, as she鈥檚 spoken with seniors about their experiences at Boston College, Gennaro has noticed a thread: Many students told her that sophomore year had been a challenging time in their nursing education, a kind of crossroads in their academic and social lives between the foundational classes all freshmen take together in the first year and the more specialized clinical practice placements and advanced coursework that define the last two years of the program.

鈥淚n many ways,鈥 said retreat co-organizer and director of the Center for Student Formation Mike Sacco, 鈥渢he middle of sophomore year is the perfect time to get students together to reflect鈥攖hey鈥檙e serious enough about their major and immersed enough in the college culture to have fruitful discussions.鈥

CSON鈥檚 Associate Dean of Undergraduate Programs Sean Clarke and Assistant Dean of Student Services, Diversity, and Inclusion Julianna Gonzalez collaborated with the Center for Student Formation鈥檚 Sacco and Tim Mulvey, assistant director of Collaborative Initiatives, to translate some of the concepts and traditions of longstanding Boston College retreats such as KAIROS into the context of nursing education. A goal of SCRUBS, Mulvey said, was to customize the formation experience for Connell School students.听

Approximately two-thirds of the 110 members of the class of 2018 attended the retreat. They were drawn in part by an opportunity to prepare for and think about the academic changes ahead鈥攕pecialized upper-class courses and simulation labs; the 鈥渢ransition to clinical"鈥攁nd career choices after graduation. But the appeal was personal and social as well. Freshman-year friends often see less of each other during sophomore year, said Bethany Candage 鈥18. 鈥淭his weekend was something I didn鈥檛 know I needed until I was here鈥攁 chance to reconnect with my classmates away from 黑料社.鈥

In particular, the small groups offered a chance for those sophomores who had started their clinical placements to share insights with classmates who were about to begin their own work in hospitals and health centers. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good to reconnect now, just when we鈥檙e starting to break off and specialize,鈥 said Trevor Golden 鈥18. 鈥淚t鈥檚 valuable to gather together again before we go out into the world.鈥 Senior leaders were also able to speak to the experience of starting to work in a hospital.听


An alumni panel discussion at SCRUBS conference

Jamie Krzmarzick 鈥09, M.S. 鈥15; Mary Naugler 鈥14; Erin Flaherty 鈥10, M.S. 鈥12; Colleen McGauley, '15; and Catherine Walker 鈥11, M.S. 鈥13 during a SCRUBS panel discussion

Over the course of the weekend, 10 Connell School seniors, five faculty members, and five recent alumni gave talks on topics such as 鈥淐hoosing Nursing,鈥 鈥淐linical Leadership,鈥 and 鈥淪ocial Life as a Nurse.鈥 Alumni and seniors shared pivotal experiences that helped them gain confidence in themselves as nursing professionals and develop their individual voices in the workplace. They emphasized the importance of forming personal and professional bonds with other nurses.

During her first clinical placement, Gabija Pileika 鈥16 said, she met a stroke victim who had lost his ability to speak. After struggling with how to best advocate for the patient, she realized she could encourage other members of the team to ask 鈥測es or no鈥 questions to communicate with him. That early experience, Pileika said, helped her understand and embrace her role as a nurse. She encouraged sophomores to 鈥渂e that voice that your patient doesn鈥檛 have.鈥