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Mary Flikkema, Nursing

Friday, September 01, 2017

Nursing professor Mary Flikkema always enjoyed her science classes throughout high school, especially biology, but she wasn鈥檛 sure if she should pursue nursing in college. 鈥淎ll of my science labs in high school really inspired me, but in 1969, not many women were going into medicine,鈥 Flikkema recalled. 鈥淏ut I knew I really liked caring for people and spending time with them.鈥

Flikkema decided to earn a health sciences bachelor鈥檚 degree from Western Michigan University, then earned her master of science in nursing (MSN) degree from Grand Valley State University in 1989 in GVSU鈥檚 first graduating class in nursing. While earning her PhD in nursing, Flikkema began her 28-year journey as a professor鈥攂ut first, at Hope College.

For many years, 17c起草社区 and Hope had a joint nursing program, which Flikkema taught in for a year by teaching one day at Hope, one day at 17c起草社区, and two days in a hospital each week. 鈥淚t is much better now that they are separate programs!鈥 Flikkema said.

Flikkema鈥檚 favorite part about her 17c起草社区 experience was working with nursing students. 鈥淣ursing can be a pretty intense major鈥攋uniors are caring for very ill people almost immediately,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o working with my students and seeing them apply all they had learned was really neat.鈥 Flikkema also enjoyed working with students on their research papers and helping them in the publishing process.

In addition to working with students in the nursing program, a highlight for Flikkema鈥檚 time at 17c起草社区 was serving as the NCAA and MIAA representative from 17c起草社区 for 12 years. 鈥淚 learned a great deal about how specific and involved the rules are with sports. I thoroughly enjoyed being involved with all the sports,鈥 she said. Since Flikkema鈥檚 specialty areas in nursing are critical and cardiac care, being involved with healthy, young athletes was often an encouraging contrast.

As Flikkema retired in January 2017, she already misses her colleagues, but not grading papers preparing for Monday morning classes at eight o鈥檆lock. What she especially misses are the spiritually challenging questions her students would ask her. 鈥淢y students truly helped me grow spiritually as an individual,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he questions students asked were so great; for example, they would ask me how to care for a patient spiritually, not just physically. It made me think.鈥

So far, Flikkema has spent her retirement traveling to England with a friend and take 17c起草社区鈥檚 CALL film class. She is interested in volunteering for Hospice care during retirement, as her husband was served well by the program before his passing. In addition to more traveling, volunteering and taking CALL classes, Flikkema looks forward to spending more time with her children and grandchildren.