Ok, I have a question for educators and I don't want to offend anyone what-so-ever so please bear with me. I truly want to know the answer to this question.
At our school, my nursing 4 instructor is extremely unapproach able. I mean, we will go to ask her a question, and immediately she is on the offensive before we even ask her. I ask questions mostly to help myself learn sometimes to clear up something that may be a little "foggy" for me. I will admit that when I (or other students) ask about particular class content whether it be IV administration, bowel questions, or something concrete like that, she is for the most part ok. But when we would happen to ask her something about an assignment, she gets very defensive as though we are questioning her authority and to be honest, I feel like I have to walk on eggshells around her.
Here's an example:
We had to do research presentations today and there was what we thought looked like a grading sheet with questions on there that we had to answer. The questions were on a sheet of paper with a small space that looked to the whole class like and area for her to write comments as we were doing presentations. There was an instruction sheet with the packet about how we were to do the research project. On the instructions it stated "Please answer the specific questions on the Research form (found on the back of the Care Plan)" Well, we all (meaning EVERYONE in the whole class) typed it up neatly, retyping the specific questions and typing our answer behind the question. As we were sitting in the room waiting for class to start, a former graduate ask how things were going. We told her we were doing our presentations today. Then she told us to be sure to write it on the specific paper because the instructor would take points off if we didn't. We were like - What?? Later, I went and asked the question and showed her how we typed it up all nice and neat (so it was ledgible) and she, with an attitude, stomped over to her file cabinet and pulled out the instructions and reread it to me. I tucked my tail, said ok, and went and told the class that we were going to have to scramble to transfer our answers from one paper to the other.
To me, the fact that they were typed up was not a big deal. I actually thought it was nice that we took pride enough in our work that we wanted it to be neat and clean. One girl in our class NEVER types ANYTHING and she even took the time to type it.
I am almost done with Nursing IV. All I have left is my preceptorship and final. Eventually I want to become a nursing instructor so I pay close attention to my instructors and try to understand how they react/reason etc.
This particular instructor seems to come off as being on an enormous power trip. I know she just recieved her Master's in the spring so I don't know if that has something to do with how she is acting or not. I realize that she may have something going on in her life that is stressful as well and it may be coming out towards students, but to be quite honest with you, she is losing my respect - and I'm not happy about that. What she is teaching me at this point is how NOT to be as an instructor. This is not the only time something like this has happened. Several times, she has written dosage calculations on tests wrong: like putting mg instead of mL. I basically know what she meant on the test the way the problem was written as well as I usually ask if I have questions but there have been students that write on the test that they would check the orders because the order could not be given as written. (In my opinion, that answer would have to be accepted because of the way the question was written) But instead, she says that us as students should know what she meant.

I mean, come on. These are students grades and lives here. Sometimes a point really can make a difference!
In this situation, (with the research project) was I really that off base to get snipped at the way I did?
(BTW, it happened to another student as well because he didn't think that she understood what I asked and the same thing happened to him.)