Our Vision is to Lead
Our goal is to create a global community of nurses who lead in using scholarship,
knowledge and technology to improve the health of the world's people.
Our Mission is to Serve, Support and Improve
The Honor Society of Nursing provides leadership and scholarship in practice, education
and research to enhance the health of all people. We support the learning and professional
development of our members, who strive to improve nursing care worldwide.
Sigma Theta Tau History
Sigma Theta Tau was founded in 1922 by six nursing students at Indiana University.
Modern nursing was barely 20 years old when Mary Tolle, Edith Moore, Marie Hippensteel,
Dorothy Garrigus, Elizabeth Russell and Elizabeth McWilliams met to found a Society
to advance the status of nursing as a profession. They recognized the value of scholarship
and the importance of excellence in practice. With the full idealism of women forging
pathways of change in the 1920s, they wanted to build a framework to encourage future
leaders to effectively improve health care.
In 1936, Sigma Theta Tau was the first organization in the U.S. to fund nursing
research. Since then the Society has underwritten more than 250 small or "seed"
grants, which often begin a whole body of research. These peer-reviewed grants are
often the first recognition of potent concepts that eventually lead to major, wide-scale
research projects and innovation in the nursing profession.