Merle Parkes


Merle Elecia Parkes was a pioneer nurse educator who spent the bulk of her extensive career championing quality education for nurses in Australia. Parkes was eventually instrumental in affecting change from solely hospital-only training, to formal nursing degrees within tertiary institutions. In 1979, under Parkes's guidance, the Western Australian Institute of Technology became the first Australian tertiary institution to receive approval for a nursing degree program, which catalysed a National shift from hospital-based training to university-based education for the nursing profession.
Parkes received her initial nursing training in New South Wales, before moving to Western Australia in 1962, and subsequently to Tasmania in 1983 for the remainder of her career.
Parkes was awarded the AM – Member of the Order of Australia – in the Australia Day Honours list in 1982 for services to nursing.
In 2002, her book A Professional Pilgrimage: a History of the Florence Nightingale Committee of Australia, 1946-1993 was published.

Career timeline

1945 – 1961

A Professional Pilgrimage: a History of the Florence Nightingale Committee of Australia, 1946-1993
The future of nurse education : professional, academic and vocational perspectives : review and discussion paper
Transitions through time
Goals in nursing
A pathway to career advancement for the enrolled nurse : a continuing education course by distance for enrolled nurses
Learning strategies for enrolled nurses : a pathway to career advancement
Apprenticeship vs. studentship for nurse education : a discussion paper
Research developments in nursing
A study of staffing patterns used in Australian hospitals for the provision of nursing care
Issues in Australian nursing
Blueprint for change: an overview of developments in nursing education in Australia
Issues in Australian nursing 2