Layers of Possibilities: Reimagining Nursing Education
Anne-Laurie Beaubrun is a Faculty Lecturer at McGill’s Ingram School of Nursing (ISoN) and currently serves as the Assistant Program Director (APD) for the Bachelor of Nursing Integrated Online Program. Previously, she served as APD for the School’s Satoko Shibata Clinical Laboratories, facilitating clinical skills education. She contributes to curriculum, student and faculty experience, and program coordination, supporting inclusive and equitable nursing education. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Nursing from the University of Sherbrooke and a Master’s degree in Education from the University of Ottawa. Her master’s major research paper employed an art-based approach as a method of inquiry and reflection, which she is currently working toward integrating into her teaching. Her clinical background includes pediatric nursing and postpartum community home care. In 2014, she received the Innovation Recognition Award for her involvement in a school-based community engagement initiative.
Anne-Laurie is from Haiti, often called la perle des Antilles. This heritage informs her values and commitment to relational, community-centred approaches in nursing education and practice. Her social justice engagement spans academic, municipal, and national levels. She is an active collaborator with ISoN’s Office of Social Accountability in Nursing. She is a member of the McGill Faculty of Medicine and Health Science’s Health Professions Education Community Engagement and Belonging Committee, and a member of the Vivre Ensemble Advisory Committee for the city of Repentigny. At the national level, she is a member and former Secretary of the CASN Social Justice and Anti-Racism Interest Group.
Presentation Description:
When I reflect on nursing education, I see knowledge, practice, and values come together like layers in a collage, carefully assembled over time, each contributing to the whole. Rooted in its history yet responsive to the present, nursing education evolves alongside an ever-changing world. How might we shape it for the future? What new layers are needed to acknowledge where we have been while responsibly preparing what is yet to come? What masterpiece do we hope to create for nurses and the communities they work alongside?
This presentation explores ways to intentionally integrate social justice—encompassing anti-oppression, decolonization, and advocacy—across multiple levels of nursing education, creating learning experiences that cultivate compassion, authenticity, humility, integrity, reflective practice, and understanding of diverse community realities, while promoting true and sustainable systemic change.
Drawing on research and professional experience, and considering intersecting identities and positionality, this presentation explores how social justice serves as a foundational layer in preparing nurses for contemporary practice. By embedding social justice as a core value, educators foster learning that is inclusive, reflective, and responsive to challenging social contexts. Attendees will gain insight into how social justice can be thoughtfully and creatively integrated throughout nursing education, including teaching, leadership, collaboration with students, colleagues, and community partners to inspire advocacy, relational practice, and equity-focused approaches.
This perspective encourages educators and students to critically examine assumptions, power dynamics, and privileges, consider multiple perspectives, and develop accountable practices that extend beyond the classroom into clinical settings. Integrating social justice in nursing education is no longer aspirational—it requires action now more than ever, as rising to responsibility means moving beyond contemplation into deliberate, tangible steps that shape the future of nursing and the communities we partner with.