How My Instructor Affected My Life

I'm not exactly sure when my instructor started hating me, or if she disliked me from the beginning. But she broke me. Any answer I would give in pre or post conference would be wrong, or not good enough. But any other student who said what I said would be right. Nursing Students General Students Article

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I sit in my car outside of the hospital where I'm doing my second term clinicals at. Tears are just rolling down my cheeks. They won't stop. In LVN school, we have 13 week terms. This is only week 7. The tears increase with this sudden thought. I cannot do this anymore. I want to drive to campus and quit this very instant. Instead, I drive home through the tears, remembering the horrible 7 weeks I've had...

The last week of Term I, we all received our clinical assignments. I was so excited! I got the clinical instructor I was hoping for, at a site I was hoping for, life looked like it was going to be great in Term II. We even started at an acute care facility this term. I was tired of the nursing home. The first day comes. The group I'm with is different. All of them older than I am, except for two new girls who were restarts. I befriend them. There's all the wonderful paperwork, and video watching that comes with orientation. Then our instructor has us write down some things she wants us to know and use this term. She goes on to tell us how our day will work. I think I can handle things. She tells us that we'll rotate through Cath lab, ER, OR, GI lab and radiology. I leave feeling confident. That was the only day I felt confident.

I started off the best I could. Introduced myself to the patients as soon as I got on the floor. Vitals, AM care. I read the charts completely. I knew my patients inside and out. I even went above and beyond what was expected of me. I would write out every abnormal lab, every medication, and learn all I needed to about both. I checked on my patients every half hour or so. I helped out my fellow student nurses when I could. Stayed on top of my paperwork. I was working so hard.

I'm not exactly sure when my instructor started hating me, or if she disliked me from the beginning. But she broke me. Any answer I would give in pre or post conference would be wrong, or not good enough. But any other student who said what I said would be right. If I was passing meds that day, she would rush me through med confession and then accuse me of not knowing my medications. She always gave me the most complicated patients, which for a while I took in stride. I figured I was getting more experience. She would not allow other students to help me, but I was expected to help them. Checking on my patients every half hour wasn't good enough, she wanted me in a patient room at all times. I never rotated to any specialty. She would barge in on me when I was bathing or changing patients, and have a complete disrespect for my patients dignity. While I was doing AM care with one patient, she would go to my other patient rooms and find things wrong with them, then chew me out in front of all the staff after. The day I sat crying in my car in front of the hospital was one of the worst.

By this time I knew she hated me. I still wasn't sure why. But she did. The patient load she gave me that day was just like any other. One total care, one was a custody patient (I was the only student to receive those, go figure), and one who had stasis ulcers on both legs and ulcers on the toes. I was to do wound care with her watching me. I asked the student leader to be there as well, for moral support. I gathered my supplies and headed into the room. I let the patient know I would be changing his dressings and asked him if he needed any pain medication. The patient was a dear old man, sweet as could be. Everything was set. I went and got my instructor. I set up and began. She stood there with a horrible look upon her face, as she always did when she was with me. I went through each step, talking with the patient while continuing. I got to a point where I was slightly confused about how to put on the medicated strip. I told her as much, and asked her how I should apply it. She just stood there. Didn't even respond to my question. My patient was also expecting an answer, both of us looked at each other and I just tried to figure things out. The patient became more aware of my instructors attitude towards me and attempted to converse with her. She gave him very short answers, not showing any interest in what he was saying. I finished up about 10 minutes after I had began. I will never forget what she said. She told me it took me too long to do the dressing change, that I was unprepared and I shouldn't be allowed to do procedures, period! She stormed out of the room. I stood there, in shock. I began to shake, out of pure humiliation and anger. I felt like an utter failure. The student leader looked at me and told me I did everything by the book. The patient tried to console me, he told me that I did a better job than most of the staff nurses before me. He even asked me what was wrong with the instructor! He couldn't believe an instructor would treat a student, let alone a patient, like that. I worked hard to maintain composure in the room, and throughout the rest of the day.

When I arrive home that day, I thanked God for getting me there safely. I called my step-mom who is an RN and explained everything that had gone on in the past 7 weeks, topping the story off with what happened today. She talked me out of quitting, and told me some clinical instructors were just awful people.

The next 6 weeks weren't any better. I still was kept on the floor. The charge nurse came to know me well. She even bragged to my instructor about how much progress I had made. My instructor just muttered something under her breath and walked away. She would call the director of nursing to come to our site weekly, for the main purpose of making me seem incompetent. I was accused of a medication error, which wasn't an error at all. The review she gave me at the end of the term was absolutely awful. By the end of the 13 weeks, my confidence was completely shattered.

Term III started the week after. I was at a site which was about a hundred times more difficult than before. The patients were what we called train wrecks. Multi-system failures, diseases I'd only read about in textbooks, and more! How could I survive this if I couldn't survive the less complicated patients before? My confidence was gone and I had two instructors to impress this time around! Because of the way I was treated during my second term, I made sure I was always on top of everything. Meds, AM care, vitals, team work, documentation... while some students were struggling to finish up charting before post conference let out, I was done hours before we even started. I was doing everything I could to stay off the radar of my instructors. I just wanted to finish the term in peace.

By the time mid-term evaluations rolled around, I was expecting the worst. I had never received a good eval, why should I be getting one now? My main instructor called me in, and I sat down. She looked at me, and asked me flat out how my second term was. I was a little confused by the question, but I told her. After I was done, she looked at me and smiled. She told me that she could tell that I tried to avoid her when at all possible, and had been curious as to why. Now she knew. She pulled out my evaluation. She proceeded to tell me that I was the best student nurse she had ever seen. She was highly impressed with everything I had done so far, my extensive knowledge of medications and lab values. The other instructor was impressed as well. Apparently she had a few complaints about every other student, but not me. I was floored. I was good?

It was in that moment that I realized I was going to make it. My previous instructor, as horrible to me as she was, gave me motivation to be on top of everything, know everything about my patient and try to be the perfect student nurse. Even though nothing was good enough for her, she turned me into the best student nurse I could've possibly been. It was the worst 13 weeks in LVN school, but out of it came something positive, I knew how to be a good nurse. I think about that instructor from time to time. Because of her, I have the confidence to tackle just about anything a patient throws my way.

Specializes in med surg, geriatric, clinical, pool.
multicollinearity said:
You know, I had a :idea: moment when I was watching my clinical instructor with another student one day. My clinical instructor was raising her voice and said to another student, "What is the matter with you!?" She was throwing her body into it and creating a certain facial expression, jutting out her jaw, to create a look of meanness.

My light bulb moment was that I could see my clinical instructor was acting. As soon as she walked away from this student, the 'act' dissolved and she looked drained from the 'put on.' When I wasn't the target, I could see just how much she was acting. I could see this when my clinical instructor was dressing down another student, but not when she did this with me due to my own adrenalin, when it was me getting some form of this act.

I realized that day that she probably thought this was how it had to be, and it appeared to exhaust her. She seemed to think the military boot camp thing was her job. It's probably how she was educated, how she was treated as a nursing student. To be fair, I don't think she had formal education in how to teach nursing students. She had a BSN and hadn't worked in a clinical setting in years.

When I understood she was putting on an act, probably didn't know better, and it was exhausting her, I no longer took it personally.

You said a mouth full as that is exactly what they are doing is acting, and I heard this straight from the horse's mouth from an actual student nurse instructor! Believe me I was asking her some questions as to why she thought it was necessary to tear students down!

So students, don't let these instructors intimidate you not for one moment!

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Yes, this sometimes happens for some unknown reason. I just had my first taste of that poison. My instructor fancied herself the superhuman nurse with the knowledge of a doctor and the righteousness of a clergy, but she did not possess either characteristic. I found her very intimidating and opinionated, but our school was badly in need of an instructor and I was grateful she stepped forward. All my other instructors gave me favorable reviews, even some "eat your young" instructors I have had (not an easy feat to accomplish) and I realize this is her first time teaching, but she really did some damage and I will never forgive her abuse of power. She shot me down like a criminal. But since this has been a life long dream and I want it so badly and since my patients are the final word...she can stuff her review up her nares. I've been through breast cancer, losing my mom to lung cancer at age 60 and nursing school all in the last two years and I know I will make an incredible nurse.....so to all you nursing students out there, hang tough and don't swallow the poison these instructors are shoving down your throats.

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queen777 said:
You said a mouth full as that is exactly what they are doing is acting, and I heard this straight from the horse's mouth from an actual student nurse instructor! Believe me I was asking her some questions as to why she thought it was necessary to tear students down!

So students, don't let these instructors intimidate you not for one moment!

I quit reading and replying to this thread a while back. This will be my last comment on this particular subject. I can appreciate that people want to vent, and there are probably a ton of horror stories out there to tell, but after a while it gets sort of wearying and depressing to hear it, plus one loses proper perspective I think, if you read too much of this stuff for too long. In spite of what I've read, I still believe that probably for every "Marine drill sergeant" type of nursing instructor, there are probably at least ten or twenty, who are understanding, compassionate, want to see people succeed, but yet are firm and tough when they need to be.

I am still waiting to be placed in nursing school - that wait will probably last for a little while yet - done with all pre-reqs and just about all co-reqs (will only have one left, and that's an online class). My point of mentioning all of this is that I've already gone through quite a bit of crap just to get to where I am now. I will have already gone through an extraordinary amount of s**t even before I spend one day in a nursing school, just to get there in the first place. From my own experience, most people are "weeded out" even before they get to nursing school.

A nursing instructor who happens to work in another capacity at the facility where I work commented to a group of nurses she was meeting with that there isn't, in her opinion, a need to weed people out of nursing school - most of that happens in pre-nursing. And I can personally attest to that by my own experience. If I were going to drop out of this, I would have done it long ago.

To all of you out there who like me are planning on being a nurse, don't let any of the negative talk or scare stories put you off. Go into this eyes wide open to be sure - I am - I already work for a large metropolitan hospital where the crime rate is high, and there are lots gang member shootings, and lots of homeless "street people". I know what I'm getting into here. At the same time you mustn't inordinately focus on just the bad stuff, and let it discourage you, dissuade you, or get you down. Nursing is a noble vocation and calling (yes, it's a calling, and always will be for many people - I'm replying to someone on another thread who suggested that maybe it was at one time, but not anymore) - it will always be a vocation, and more than just a job. It's usually harder to break into a real vocation - that's to be expected. You will run into these things in your training in that vocation. All things, including the posts to this thread have to be put into their proper perspective. And that will be my final word on this particular thread.

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I know exactly how you feel! I had an instructor my LPN year that did the exact same thing to me. Your situation sounds so familiar it brought tears to my eyes. I too spent many trips home in tears, never let her once see me cry though. I wish I could give you some insight into how she made me a better nurse but she didn't! Just hang in there you'll get through it. Nursing is a tough field and there will be many more challenges but it sounds like you're are doing the right things and I'm sure you'll be a great nurse!:nurse:

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Why are there so MANY nursing instructors that are rude, mean, and vindictive? That is the question that should be asked? Why does the nursing profession attract so many maladjusted individuals? I make friends easily and keep them, yet in nursing (in school and at work) I have come across some that live to hurt others. It's quite interesting and perplexing. I'm sure these mean-hearted individuals help to increase the nursing shortage due to deplorable working conditions despite wonderful patients.

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PeaceonearthRN said:
My dear future nurse!

Ah, how your article reminded me of an instructor I 'experienced'. Not only did she 'attack' me the first day of clinicals when I expressed fear of the unexpected but she continued throughout the experience. She even lied about 'supervising me' when she was not even in site.

There will be many dysfunctional situations in your career as a nurse. There will also be many situations that involve individuals with integrity and an interest in the 'whole picture'.

Rest assured my friend that you are not alone; however, you read the signals correctly. You continued to forge ahead, learned to expand your abilities and in spite of her attitude you rose like the phoenix from the fire!

:up: No one can keep a good nurse down. I see this happen to people even after they are licensed and working. This is a good experience to identify what to ignore, how to expand your knowledge and increase your self worth and forge ahead! Continue to use their negative energy to fuel your desire to provide good patient care. There are always going to be days that do not meet your expectations. Know this! There will also be days when you walk away knowing you provided the best care anyone possibly could provide.

There are bullies everywhere including education. They are eventually identified as no one can get way with this negativity forever. Keep that in mind next time someone tries to intimate you like this! You will eventually identify their method of operation quickly and realize 'IT'S NOT YOU'..!:yeah:

AMEN! Can't believe the attitudes of some of those in a position to educate and elevate the field! Bottom line, breathe, its their problem, not yours.

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queen777 said:
Yep, I had a clinical instructor just like her and I too ended up in tears, but I overcame too.

Funny thing is my daughter is now in engaged to a guy whose mother was LVN instructor. I just met her a couple of weeks ago and here is a tip for those still in school...straight from the horse's mouth.... they do this on purpose!

Oh I let her have it! I let her know exactly how I thought that kind of behavior works just the opposite on new student nurses. Plus after I told her about a lot of my horror nursing stories, she replied, "they really were after you, weren't they?"

I asked her why did she think it was necessary to treat new nurses like that? She just laughed..I can't tell you what she called herself., but it wasn't nice, but maybe to another nursing instructor it was. I get the feeling they are in their own little world, just what my husband used to say about nursing instructors! I got the feeling they act all tough and mean and sometimes the meaner the better!

It's a pity. You would think that with today's nursing shortage and the aging population, they would realize how that way of thinking just doesn't do anyone any good! Weeding is one thing, disrespect and unprofessionalism is quite the other.

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My goodness honey! Nobody and nobody but you can take your dream away! You inspire me to go ahead and do my best! I thought that I had it bad but I don't have it like that. You inspire me to go ahead and do what god lead me to do and not let anybody get me down! HUGE KUDOS TO YOU HUN!!!!!! HUGE!!!!!

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Specializes in Hospice Care, Med/Surg.

This article has touched my life. There has been many times where I could have cried because I felt as if I were treated differently. Thanks so much for staying the course for students just like us. Congrats!

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What a fantastic story. You rock! Thank you for not giving up.

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You are AWESOME, and have differently motivated me.

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I am so happy you did not give in, that particular professor had an issue that was beyond you or anything you could have possibly done. And congrats on making it through.

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