The Marjory Gordon Program

In 1973, Dr. Marjory Gordon, along with other nursing leaders, embarked on an effort to capture nursing’s phenomena of concern, name and define theses phenomena and develop a framework that has help to inform nursing knowledge, the Standards of Nursing Practice, nursing curricula, clinical research, and ultimately the scope of professional nursing practice, internationally. The advancement of the nursing diagnosis movement across North America and later the world (NANDA-I) along with the development of a framework to guide nursing assessment, namely the Eleven Functional Health Patterns, have distinguished Dr. Gordon’s contributions to the discipline. For this profound work, and more importantly for her personal leadership and dedication to the Marjory Gordon Program for Knowledge Development and Clinical Reasoning was established. Within this program, The Marjory Gordon International Gordon Fellows Program has been established to promote the continued advancement of nursing knowledge about patients' response to illness, clinical reasoning and decision making and patient care delivery 



2021 Conference:

  • Dates: June 16th - 17th
  • Location: Live via Zoom

Legacy

Marjory Gordon was professor emerita at the Connell School of Nursing for 23 years and a rare visionary whose work remains as relevant today as it was during its beginnings.

International Gordon Fellows Program

The Gordon Program promotes the continued advancement of nursing knowledge about patients' response to illness, clinical reasoning and decision making and patient care delivery.

Conference

The NANDA-I Conference welcomes nursing experts from around the world to discuss improving standards of care and redefining the role of leadership in health care.

NANDA-I

The Marjory Gordon Program for Clinical Reasoning and Knowledge Development is a global initative between NANDA-I and the Connell School of Nursing that began in 2017.

The NANDA-International Conference is a biannual event held at Boston College that discusses nurses as leaders in health care.