Mother-Daughter MEPN Dyad Takes the Stage Together at Summer Convocation Ceremony

Aug. 15, 2022

The Hooding Ceremony at a nursing convocation is a pivotal moment for master’s degree candidates. When a faculty member invests their hood over the student, it signifies the student's successful completion of their graduate program. It’s a proud moment both for faculty and students. But for Assistant Clinical Professor Lorre Laws, PhD, and her daughter Katie DiBene, who graduated from the University of Arizona College of Nursing’s Master of Science for Entry into the Profession of Nursing (MEPN) program at the August 11 Summer Convocation ceremony, it had a special twist.

In what is possibly the very first mother-daughter dyad in the UArizona MEPN program’s history, Dr. Laws proudly hooded DiBene during the ceremony. “From the time my kids were young, my job was always to follow their bliss,” Dr. Laws, who graduated from the MEPN program in 2013, says. “Never did I forecast that my daughter would pursue the same career path as I did. I’m so very proud but I’m also so humbled that she would resonate facilitating healing as deeply as I do. It’s a proud mom moment but it has deeper connections to our shared healer’s heart.”


Never did I forecast that my daughter would pursue the same career path as I did. I’m so very proud but I’m also so humbled that she would resonate facilitating healing as deeply as I do. It’s a proud mom moment but it has deeper connections to our shared healer’s heart," ~ Lorre Laws, PhD


It's rare for a parent and their child to pursue similar career arcs, but Dr. Laws and DiBene’s urge to care for society’s most vulnerable people caused their professional aspirations to intersect, albeit through different pathways. After a midlife career pivot out of the real estate industry, Dr. Laws devoted her energies to nursing. “I wasn’t making a difference in the way I was called to do,” she says. “So, I went through the MEPN program and I just flourished.”

She fell in love with nursing as a profession and as a discipline, but also found she loved both teaching and research. Her path from MEPN student to DNP student to faculty member was marked by strong mentorship and guidance from College faculty, a dynamic she watched play out when it came time for her daughter to go through the program. “It’s one thing to see me benefit, but it’s a whole other thing when you’re watching your child go thru this process and see how richly she was supported and mentored by the MEPN faculty.,” Dr. Laws says. “It was truly beautiful to behold.”

For her part, DiBene gravitated toward nursing after her aspirations to join the Peace Corps fizzled in the wake of COVID-19. Having watched her mom go through the UArizona program, she knew that it was a career that could afford her the opportunity to further her dream of working with rural, indigenous populations. Knowing how much her mom loved the profession, she saw it as a great opportunity with a lot of stability within it. “She definitely influenced me to get into MEPN,” DiBene says. “And also before joining the program, seeing that she went through it, that she could do it.”

Dr. Laws was a resource throughout DiBene’s time in the program. “If I had questions or if there was something I didn’t understand from the professors, she was a great resource because she had been through the program herself,” DiBene says. “And she was my mom so it was a win-win because we already have a relationship.”

DiBene found the 15-month program fast-paced and challenging, but she worked hard and gained confidence, ultimately earning a 4.0 grade average. In her final semester, during her preceptorship, she decided she would pursue hospice work, which is what she plans to pursue after convocation. “It's hard and fast but you learn a lot,” she says. “You gain a lot of knowledge and a lot of skills about how to care for people and what resources there are in the community.” In the future, she hopes to offer her skills to help vulnerable, rural populations internationally.

As a professor, Dr. Laws was delighted to watch her own daughter be instructed by some of her own former faculty during her time in the MEPN program – as well as members of her own cohort. And when Convocation rolled around and the two of them took the stage together, albeit with different roles, she was overjoyed.

“My mom heart is full,” Dr. Laws says, reflecting on the moment she got to hood DiBene. “When you have them in your arms as an infant, you can never in a million years forecast this parallel path that we find ourselves on. As both a mom and as a nurse faculty member, it’s so rich. There have been so many students that I have taught along that way that I don’t have the opportunity to hood or pin, so not only am I hooding my daughter but it’s a moment where I can celebrate all the students that I’ve had the privilege of supporting along the way.”