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​Practice limitations

If your SPE proposal is approved, an application form for a provisional licence and payment form will be emailed to you. Complete these forms and return them to BCCNM. You may not start your SPE until you receive an email from BCCNM confirming you have been granted a provisional licence.

Provisional licensure will include the condition that you may only practice at the facility approved for the purpose of completing your SPE.

SPE Evaluation

Form 90: SPE Evaluation Form​ enables your employer and preceptor to provide feedback and evaluate whether you are meeting BCCNM's​ standards​ and your learning plan goals.

Once you have completed the SPE, request the sponsoring employer/agency to complete and submit the SPE Practice Evaluation form directly to BCCNM at registrationmonitoring@bccnm.ca

Next steps

Once BCCNM has received the completed SPE Evaluation form, BCCNM will determine if you have successfully implemented your learning plan and demonstrated that you met the professional standards. We will then inform you if you are eligible for practising licensure.

Evaluation form

900 – 200 Granville St
Vancouver, BC  V6C 1S4
Canada

info@bccnm​.ca
604.742.6200​
​Toll-free 1.866.880.7101 (within Canada only) ​


We acknowledge the rights and title of the First Nations on whose collective unceded territories encompass the land base colonially known as British Columbia. We give specific thanks to the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ speaking peoples the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) and sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations and the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh-ulh Sníchim speaking Peoples the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation), on whose unceded territories BCCNM’s office is located. We also give thanks for the medicines of these territories and recognize that laws, governance, and health systems tied to these lands and waters have existed here for over 9000 years.

We also acknowledge the unique and distinct rights, including rights to health and wellness, of First Nations, Inuit​ and Métis peoples from elsewhere in Canada who now live in British Columbia. As leaders in the settler health system, we acknowledge our responsibilities to these rights under international, national, and provincial law.​