At FNU, students are not alone in their search for clinical site placement. Our clinical support teams are with them every step of the way.
FNU students complete coursework online and a clinical experience in their home communities across the country. The convenience and flexibility that distance education brings to nurse-midwifery and nurse practitioner students is one of FNU’s primary advantages. Another great benefit to students is FNU’s dedicated staff and faculty teams who assist in identifying and selecting qualified preceptors and customizing a clinical experience to each student’s unique needs and interests.
Preceptors (nurse-midwives, nurse practitioners and other healthcare providers) play a crucial role in mentoring students and helping them gain the clinical experience they need for long-term success. Our Clinical Outreach and Placement Services Team helps students connect with preceptors in their program area, ensuring the student’s needs, interests and goals are met during their clinical experience.
I found the Clinical Outreach and Placement Office very helpful in helping me navigate what steps I should be taking next and as a sounding board for my ideas and concerns.”
- Crystal Miller, FNU Student
The team is led by Director of Clinical Outreach and Placement, Stephanie Boyd, and Assistant Director of Clinical Outreach and Placement, Brittany Bachman. The dedicated team of Clinical Advisors includes Jamie Wheeler, George Duvall, Kaycie Ford and Sarah Johansen. Jamie, George, Kaycie and Sarah assist students with placement for clinical rotations, and Brittany provides attentive customer service to our preceptors. This team partners with students to:
- Provide assistance and resources in locating clinical sites and preceptors
- Troubleshoot challenging situations
- Work one-on-one with students to navigate the overall clinical search process
- Bring support and customer service to FNU's vast preceptor network
Director of Clinical Outreach and Placement
Stephanie Boyd
Assistant Director of Clinical Outreach and Placement
Brittany Bachman
Senior Clinical Advisor
Jamie Wheeler
Clinical Advisor
George Duvall
Clinical Advisor
Kaycie Ford
Clinical Advisor
Sarah Sarah Johansen
Additionally, students are supported by Regional Clinical Faculty (RCF) and the Clinical Credentialing Team, led by Director of Clinical Credentialing Jodi Dickey, MAHEA, CPCS.
Regional Clinical Faculty are talented and experienced practitioners across the U.S. who help ensure clinical success by:
- Ensuring a student’s identified clinical site(s) and preceptor(s) are appropriate for program requirements
- Serving as student mentors throughout the clinical practicum
Director of Clinical Credentialing
Jodi Dickey
The Clinical Credentialing Team assists students in the clinical credentialing process. Our dedicated Clinical Credentialing Coordinators work to:
- Establish an affiliation agreement (contract) with clinical sites
- Exchange certificates of insurance
- Credential preceptors
- Facilitate student onboarding at sites
- Meet state board of nursing requirements for clinical placement
Our clinical advisors are here for you every step of the way. Every day we celebrate these successes and milestones with our students, and we know you can do it too.”
- Jamie Wheeler, Senior Clinical Advisor
FNU’s other clinical support resources include:
- Community Map. FNU students have exclusive access to our Community Map which houses a network of more than 20,000 clinical sites and preceptors throughout all 50 states with new preceptors and sites continually added. This map allows you to explore an extensive pool of potential clinical sites and resources located around the country. Filtering fields enable searches by location, site type, and preceptor specialty to help personalize your clinical experience.
- Insurance. FNU provides general and professional liability insurance for all clinical students.
- Case Days. Case Days are held in-person or virtually across the U.S., where students who are in their clinical practicum present cases to facilitate group discussion of management options. These seminars provide opportunities for group learning and networking with students, faculty, alumni, and local practitioners within the region.
If you or someone you know is interested in becoming a nurse-midwife or nurse practitioner, we are now accepting applications on a rolling basis. Applicants can learn the status of their application as soon as four to five weeks after complete and valid application materials are received by FNU’s Admission Services.
To learn more about FNU’s dedicated clinical placement services, visit our website.
To learn more about becoming a preceptor, visit Frontier.edu/preceptor.



















Carrie Belin is an experienced board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner and a graduate of the Johns Hopkins DNP program, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Georgetown University School of Nursing, and Johns Hopkins School of Nursing. She has also completed fellowships at Georgetown and the University of California Irvine.
Angie has been a full-scope midwife since 2009. She has experience in various birth settings including home, hospital, and birth centers. She is committed to integrating the midwifery model of care in the US. She completed her master’s degree in nurse-midwifery at Frontier Nursing University (FNU) and her Doctorate at Johns Hopkins University. She currently serves as the midwifery clinical faculty at FNU. Angie is motivated by the desire to improve the quality of healthcare and has led quality improvement projects on skin-to-skin implementation, labor induction, and improving transfer of care practices between hospital and community midwives. In 2017, she created a short film on skin-to-skin called 










Justin C. Daily, BSN, RN, has ten years of experience in nursing. At the start of his nursing career, Justin worked as a floor nurse on the oncology floor at St. Francis. He then spent two years as the Director of Nursing in a small rural Kansas hospital before returning to St. Francis and the oncology unit. He has been in his current position as the Chemo Nurse Educator for the past four years. He earned an Associate in Nurse from Hutchinson Community College and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Bethel College.
Brandy Jackson serves as the Director of Undergraduate Nursing Programs and Assistant Educator at Wichita State University and Co-Director of Access in Nursing. Brandy is a seasoned educator with over 15 years of experience. Before entering academia, Brandy served in Hospital-based leadership and Critical Care Staff nurse roles. Brandy is passionate about equity in nursing education with a focus on individuals with disabilities. Her current research interests include accommodations of nursing students with disabilities in clinical learning environments and breaking down barriers for historically unrepresented individuals to enter the nursing profession. Brandy is also actively engaged in Interprofessional Education development, creating IPE opportunities for faculty and students at Wichita State. Brandy is an active member of Wichita Women for Good and Soroptimist, with the goal to empower women and girls. Brandy is a TeamSTEPPS master trainer. She received the DASIY Award for Extraordinary Nursing Faculty in 2019 at Wichita State University.
Dr. Sabrina Ali Jamal-Eddine is an Arab-disabled queer woman of color with a PhD in Nursing and an interdisciplinary certificate in Disability Ethics from the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC). Dr. Jamal-Eddine’s doctoral research explored spoken word poetry as a form of critical narrative pedagogy to educate nursing students about disability, ableism, and disability justice. Dr. Jamal-Eddine now serves as a Postdoctoral Research Associate in UIC’s Department of Disability and Human Development and serves on the Board of Directors of the National Organization of Nurses with Disabilities (NOND). During her doctoral program, Sabrina served as a Summer Fellow at a residential National Endowment of the Humanities (NEH) Summer Institute at Arizona State University (2023), a summer fellow at Andrew W. Mellon’s National Humanities Without Walls program at University of Michigan (2022), a Summer Research Fellow at UC Berkeley’s Othering & Belonging Institute (2021), and an Illinois Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental and related Disabilities (LEND) trainee (2019-2020).
Vanessa Cameron works for Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nursing Education & Professional Development. She is also attending George Washington University and progressing towards a PhD in Nursing with an emphasis on ableism in nursing. After becoming disabled in April 2021, Vanessa’s worldview and perspective changed, and a recognition of the ableism present within healthcare and within the culture of nursing was apparent. She has been working since that time to provide educational foundations for nurses about disability and ableism, provide support for fellow disabled nursing colleagues, and advocate for the disabled community within healthcare settings to reduce disparities.
Dr. Lucinda Canty is a certified nurse-midwife, Associate Professor of Nursing, and Director of the Seedworks Health Equity in Nursing Program at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She earned a bachelor’s degree in nursing from Columbia University, a master’s degree from Yale University, specializing in nurse-midwifery, and a PhD from the University of Connecticut. Dr. Canty has provided reproductive health care for over 29 years. Her research interests include the prevention of maternal mortality and severe maternal morbidity, reducing racial and ethnic health disparities in reproductive health, promoting diversity in nursing, and eliminating racism in nursing and midwifery.
Dr. Lisa Meeks is a distinguished scholar and leader whose unwavering commitment to inclusivity and excellence has significantly influenced the landscape of health professions education and accessibility. She is the founder and executive director of the DocsWithDisabilities Initiative and holds appointments as an Associate Professor in the Departments of Learning Health Sciences and Family Medicine at the University of Michigan.
Dr. Nikia Grayson, DNP, MSN, MPH, MA, CNM, FNP-C, FACNM (she/her) is a trailblazing force in reproductive justice, blending her expertise as a public health activist, anthropologist, and family nurse-midwife to champion the rights and health of underserved communities. Graduating with distinction from Howard University, Nikia holds a bachelor’s degree in communications and a master’s degree in public health. Her academic journey also led her to the University of Memphis, where she earned a master’s in medical anthropology, and the University of Tennessee, where she achieved both a master’s in nursing and a doctorate in nursing practice. Complementing her extensive education, she completed a post-master’s certificate in midwifery at Frontier Nursing University.









Dr. Tia Brown McNair is the Vice President in the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Student Success and Executive Director for the Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation (TRHT) Campus Centers at the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U) in Washington, DC. She oversees both funded projects and AAC&U’s continuing programs on equity, inclusive excellence, high-impact practices, and student success. McNair directs AAC&U’s Summer Institutes on High-Impact Practices and Student Success, and TRHT Campus Centers and serves as the project director for several AAC&U initiatives, including the development of a TRHT-focused campus climate toolkit. She is the lead author of From Equity Talk to Equity Walk: Expanding Practitioner Knowledge for Racial Justice in Higher Education (January 2020) and Becoming a Student-Ready College: A New Culture of Leadership for Student Success (July 2016 and August 2022 Second edition).