Robin Bartlett

Associate Dean of Research, Professor

Education

  • PhD, Nursing, The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, 2003
  • MSN, Nursing Administration, University of North Carolina Greensboro, 1987
  • BSN, Bachelor Science in Nursing, University of North Carolina Greensboro, 1978

Biography

Dr. Robin Bartlett joined the Capstone College of Nursing in 2019. She previously taught for many years and served as Director of the Ph.D. in nursing program for four years at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Prior to that Dr. Bartlett’s clinical focus area was the psychiatric and mental health inpatient setting, where she served in staff nurse and leadership roles. She has also worked in the community focused on the care of persons with psychiatric and mental health issues.

Gaining inspiration from her clinical practice experiences, Dr. Bartlett’s primary research focus is in understanding and prevention of risk behaviors, primarily among underserved youth. Broadly she is interested in health equity research. She has conducted intervention studies focused on the prevention of risk behaviors that could lead to negative health outcomes for African American and Latinx adolescent girls. She has also conducted nursing education research. Other areas of research/methods interest include parenting, interdisciplinary research, health systems research, analyses of existing data, and community-based participatory research.

She and a team of collaborators are funded with a Science Education Partnership Award from NIGMS/NIH to replicate West Virginia’s Health Science & Technology Academy (HSTA) in Alabama. HSTA-AL is a program designed to build a more diverse nursing, nurse faculty, nurse scientist and other biomedical professions workforce from among rural, primarily African American, economically disadvantaged students. This same team, along with other Capstone College of Nursing faculty members, were also funded by the Alabama Commission on Higher Education to design and conduct a program entitled “A Bridge to College Success for Rural Alabamians” or Bridges. The Bridges program supported recent high school graduates who had been accepted to The University of Alabama and had declared nursing as their intended major to build skills and knowledge to help them be successful in their pursuit of the BSN.

Dr. Bartlett’s recent teaching experiences have been with MSN students pursuing degrees in nursing administration, working with DNP students on capstone projects, and teaching PhD courses including quantitative methods and the various roles of the PhD-prepared nurse. She has led and served on several dissertation committees.

Dr. Bartlett is actively involved with several organizations. She has held elected leadership positions with Sigma Theta Tau International at the local, regional and international levels. She is active in the Southern Nursing Research Society having served in elected positions with that organization. She is also a member of Phi Kappa Phi.

Across her career Dr. Bartlett has received awards in teaching, leadership and scholarship/research. Two of these include being recognized as a “Great 100” nurse in North Carolina and the D. Jean Wood Nursing Scholarship Award from SNRS.
Dr. Bartlett has been married for over 30 years to Ken Byrd, a retired college professor. Between them they have 4 children and 7 grandchildren living across several states along the eastern seaboard.

Honors and Awards

  • The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, inducted 2019
  • D. Jean Wood Nursing Scholarship Award, Southern Nursing Research Society, 2006
  • Gamma Zeta Chapter, Sigma Theta Tau International, 2022 Excellence in Nursing Research Award

Areas of Interest

  • Social Determinants of Health & Health Disparities
  • Minority Health
  • Adolescent and/or Pediatric Health

Scholarly Highlights

  • Dr. Bartlett and a team of Capstone Stone College of Nursing collaborators are funded with a Science Education Partnership Award from NIGMS/NIH to replicate West Virginia’s Health Science & Technology Academy (HSTA) in Alabama. HSTA-AL is a program designed to build a more diverse nursing, nurse faculty, nurse scientist and other biomedical professions workforce from among rural, primarily African American, economically disadvantaged students.
  • Along with Capstone College of Nursing collaborators, Dr. Bartlett was funded by the Alabama Commission on Higher Education to design and conduct a program entitled “A Bridge to College Success for Rural Alabamians” or Bridges. The Bridges program supported recent high school graduates who had been accepted to The University of Alabama and had declared nursing as their intended major to build skills and knowledge to help them be successful in their pursuit of the BSN at The University of Alabama.