Abolishing the Pinning Ceremony

Nurses General Nursing

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  1. Should the Pinning Ceremony traditionally held to honor graduate nurses be abolished?

    • 61
      yes
    • 245
      NO

306 members have participated

Hi all,

I am currently a nursing student in a BSN RN program heading into my senior year (woo hoo almost done). I have also been elected Vice President of the Student Nurses Association at my school and today I got hit with a big blow in an officers meeting!! I was advised that the ceremony to honor the culmination of all my and my peers hard work is no longer going to be celebrated; as the school has decided to do away with the pinning ceremony.

Initially, i was at a loss from words. I remembered sitting in my very first nursing class and learning about what a prestigious honor it is to be pinned; to be recognized and welcomed into the the profession of nursing. When I questioned the faculty as to why this decision has been made, there only response was that "The pinning ceremony is more common place in associate programs..." (My school is a BSN program)...they followed with our school "is trying to become a larger school, in terms of the nursing program, and we found that the larger schools no longer have a pinning."

So my question is, is this true? Has it become more common place to not have a pinning ceremony? Is this a long held tradition that has fallen to the way side? If so is there some sort of recognition held in lieu of a pinning? and if so what? Personally, I DO NOT want to let this tradition go and I feel if this is the case it is a shame. Myself and the other officers are trying to gain feedback on this issue. We are also tasked with breaking this information to the rest of our class, whom i feel will be just as upset as I am. However before doing so, we want to have sufficient enough information and a petition prepared in the event the general consensus is to fight for our right to be pinned! Please let me know what you all think of this, or if you have heard that the recent trend is to do away with the pinning and what schools are doing so. My college is located in New York, very close to the city.

Thank you for all your input:)

Specializes in Geriatrics, Community Care Nursing, CCM.

When I went to ADN school we had a very big to do- separate nursing graduation ceremony and pinning= very moving. When I entered an RN to BSN program at the University, the pinning ceremony was elective. Probably most people didn't go because with a University, students attend from all over. I would have been a tiny fish in a very big ocean. I did attend the December university graduation ceremony. The university I went to divided that ceremony into and afternoon and morning ceremony by majors, so we each got to walk across the stage and have our name read aloud with our degree and our honors. The school didn't even have a guest speaker to blab and take up time either. The Chancellor said he felt like it it was more important to walk across the stage than to listen to him talk! To me that was the big deal because I graduated summa cum laude. At my son's graduation, it was so huge, no one walked across the stage, just an entire major stood up together and sat back down.

Specializes in retired LTC.

Last entry, promise. #1 - I think I need to correct something I previously posted. I think those annual nursing pins magazine covers were the product of Nursing '74, '75, '76, '77, etc, (every year they changed the year number). SORRY! RN magazine was another good publication of the time along with AJN. #2 - This topic is reflecting some really passionate polarization. I'm surprised that so many don't feel the same re: the heritage of this simple rite of passage. Yeah, it's sentimental and costly, sometimes, and mushy. But how many of you would forego engagement and wedding rings? How about Sweet 16 birthday parties & prom nites (all sentimental, co$tly and mushy)? Sheesh...we need some magic in our profession! Like cookies for Santa's reindeer and teeth under our pillows. I do recognize there are some exceptions for strong personal reasons to opt out, but this issue is only about recognizing ourselves for our accomplishments and sharing with those closest to us at the time...our families and peers. Lord knows...nobody else will and future opportunities will be limited. (I'll step down from my soapbox now - thanks for listening.)

graduating in two days with my BSN and our pinning will be along with our graduation. I believe this is the first time they're doing it that way. sad.....hopefully it doesn't mean they'll eventually get rid of it all together

My college had a pinning ceremony when I graduated. It was a great experience. It was something that our instructors, the elder generation of nurses, was able to hand down to us, the younger generation of nurses. It bound us together into one profession as our teachers welcomed us as budding colleages. Pinning is a long-running tradition. I understand that nursing leaders want nursing to appear professional and relevent, but we cannot sacrifice our history for this effort.

Long live the pinning ceremony!

This thread makes me so sad for the future of nursing...and nurses wonder why so many new grads are skipping straight over NP programs.

I graduate with my BSN in 6 months, and I have no idea if we have a pinning ceremony! I think if we do it's along with graduation because my school is just a school for nursing, so it doesn't have to share graduation with other majors. It would be super to be pinned!

We had a pinning at my school (BSN program). We finished the program in September, and had the option to go to the general school graduation the following May. Months after actually finishing the program, and with other degrees we didn't really relate with. Pinning was just for the program and much more meaningful imo than a big massive graduation. How lame of your school.

Specializes in ..

I like traditions, too. The symbolism of 'pinning' is that a member of the profession officially grants that status to a graduating nurse. At my school it was usually the director of the school (who was an RN) who pinned each student. Later, the school allowed students to choose any member of the faculty to give the pin. Later, still, the school permitted students to choose a family member or friend who was a nurse to pin the graduate. Graduates were then having their mothers, brothers, boyfriends, wives and neighbors pinning them--people who were not nurses "If she can have her mom give her a pin, why can't my mom give me mine?") The school couldn't check the credentials of each person granting pins, so eventually they did away with the tradition because it lost its meaning. Sad that the grads lost the opportunity to have the ceremony; the director told me that it was easier to abandon 'pinning' than it was to try to fight to keep it symbolic.

Specializes in IMC.

I graduated in 2009 from an LPN program and we had a capping and pinning ceremony. It was funded by our class. we had fundraisers and class dues to help off set the cost of the caps, pins, and lanterns. We all wore the same white dress. I thought getting pinned was a grand tradition and was something to be proud of. I do not get why schools are doing away with it. We got capped and pinned by faculty and/ or family, but they had to be a either an RN or LPN. And our junior class assisted with the refreshments(only serving). We paid for our own refreshments. This was condidered our graduation. We had the option to go to the Technical colleges regular graduation, but I did not elect to go.

Specializes in Operating Room.

My pinning meant more to me than graduation. As a matter of fact, I didn't even go to graduation. I sure did go to my pinning and I invited everyone, lol. Sad that some people won't get to have this memory..

And nursing students are different from other majors. There are few majors that are as time intensive, exhausting and life changing as nursing. You develop pretty strong bonds in nursing school, even if it's only with a few people.

I guess it is somewhat redundant .. after all there is the graduation ceremony.

However it is a TRADITION in nursing. A separate special event that recognizes our achievements and efforts.

We are not the average graduate!

Funny, I had just ran across a pic of my pinning ceremony.. my now deceased parents are in the background ... beaming !

Sooo glad I have that.

Keep up the good fight... let us know!

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
I am currently enrolled in an ADN program in the state of Illinois and my school also didn't want to give my graduating class a pinning ceremony. The Dean of Nurses stated that "it is an outdated practice that was started at diploma nursing programs and we're trying to get away from that."

That attitude makes me sad, and I really hope it's not the norm among Deans of Nursing now. I realized last night my avatar and profile pic are from our pinning ceremony which also involved a candle (lamp) lighting. It was so long ago I thought it may have been from graduation. Now I remember the nurse lighting my candle was not actually my instructor but one from a previous class who wanted to take part. Those who don't find meaning in tradition or symbolic ceremonies of any kind are free to stay home. There is so much divisiveness in this field it's nice to remember that one feeling of bonding from that brief ceremony.

I applaud your class for taking action and fighting for your ceremony. Thank God there are still younger people who get that all of us stand on the shoulders of a long history of nurses and "trying to get away from that" is really misguided.

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