it seems that, for the most part, failing nursing school has primarily to do with getting pegged off in clinicals. sometimes this is easily justifiable (e.g., truly dangerous action on the part of the student, general lack of professionalism, etc.). however, based on many of the stories i've read here and elsewhere, it is often unjustifiable (e.g., a nasty CI targets a student and makes a case to fail them). i have heard many stories regarding specific CI's at my school that i plan on avoiding throughout my time here, if at all possible;not because i can't or am unwilling to work with "difficult" people, but because i am unwilling to be failed out of nursing school. i am curious as to how many people here have been strategical about their CI selection, and to what extent they (or others they might know) attribute this to their surviving nursing school.thanks. has "rate my professor" been of any assistance?
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it seems that, for the most part, failing nursing school has primarily to do with getting pegged off in clinicals. sometimes this is easily justifiable (e.g., truly dangerous action on the part of the student, general lack of professionalism, etc.). however, based on many of the stories i've read here and elsewhere, it is often unjustifiable (e.g., a nasty CI targets a student and makes a case to fail them). i have heard many stories regarding specific CI's at my school that i plan on avoiding throughout my time here, if at all possible;not because i can't or am unwilling to work with "difficult" people, but because i am unwilling to be failed out of nursing school. i am curious as to how many people here have been strategical about their CI selection, and to what extent they (or others they might know) attribute this to their surviving nursing school.thanks. has "rate my professor" been of any assistance?