Nursing instructors need higher wages; not a lower bar

Jeopardizing the quality of nursing care for a quick political fix is troubling. 

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Columnists

April 16, 2026 - 2:36 PM

When a profession is in high demand but short supply, the laws of supply and demand are clear. 

Wages rise. Scarcity forces employers to compete, using higher salaries to attract workers.

Those higher wages also send an important signal, drawing in new people and easing shortages. 

This evidently does not apply to Kansas’s nurse educators. 

Despite broad agreement that educator shortages are a central driver of the state’s nursing shortfall, pay remains unchanged. 

When lawmakers turned their attention to the problem, they had a choice. They could address compensation and let the market respond. 

Or they could weaken teaching qualifications, hoping to coax more nurses into faculty positions. 

They opted to dilute teaching qualifications, stripping away a long-standing credential for nursing faculty. 

Now, educators need only hold a degree one level above the students they teach, meaning nurses with bachelor’s degree can teach at community colleges and those having a master’s can teach bachelor’s students. 

The Legislature prioritized increasing the number of educators, not understanding the causes of the shortage. 

Republican Rep. Sean Tarwater of Stillwell distilled the Legislature’s approach when he said: “Does it really matter who or how the material is delivered? I don’t care if you learned it on YouTube. Let’s get more nurses out there.”

In its 2025-26 faculty vacancy survey, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing asked nursing schools to rank the most critical faculty recruitment challenges. 

By a wide margin, noncompetitive salaries topped the list, a finding that has persisted for well over a decade. A lack of qualified applicants ranked last. 

Compensation is the problem. 

For example, Kansas nursing faculty earn a median salary of roughly $70,000, less than registered nurses at $78,000 and far below other master’s and doctoral prepared nursing roles, such as advanced practice RN $112,000; nurse midwife $120,000; nurse practitioner, $125,000 and nurse anesthetist $183,000. 

The real shortage is nurses willing to take a pay cut to become nursing faculty. 

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