Precepting the Preceptor

Very few institutions expend the resources to teach their preceptors how to precept. Here are some of the things I've learned. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

If you believe everything you read on allnurses, preceptors, by and large, are awful people put on earth to torment new grads. Since I genuinely believe that most preceptors honestly try to do the very best they can (however reluctant they might have been to take on the task) I'm concluding that it is their precepting abilities, not their intentions that are lacking. The awful truth is that very few hospitals put a genuine effort into precepting the preceptor, mentoring the mentor or teaching the teachers to teach. Most of us are just pointed in the direction of the new employee with vague instructions to "orient them." Here is a bit of what I've learned in my many years as a preceptor.

It's not just about teaching the new grad how to put in a Foley, drop an NG or violate a vein. We also have the responsibility to teach them to be good employees and good colleagues. Most new nurses have never held a real job before -- with apologies to those of you for whom nursing is a second career. I was a waitress, cook, bartender, maid, wedding photographer, lab assistant and tutor to work my way through college, but nursing was my first real job. I needed to learn the importance of staff meetings and the proper way to dress for one, teamwork and about taking on additional responsibilities such as Policy and Procedure Committee or Nursing Grand Rounds. That's part of what we as preceptors need to impart. A new nurse who hasn't witnessed good teamwork will have a tough time being a good team player and one who hasn't been shown professionalism may conclude that it isn't important.

Part of being a good preceptor is socializing your orientee to your unit. That doesn't mean you become their instant best friend. After you've been out drinking until dawn with someone, it's pretty hard to tell them that their organizational skills are lacking or their sterile technique is absent. But it's important to introduce your orientee around. One of my former preceptors made the point that part of my orientation was learning to order lunch from the local take-out. At another hospital I learned that failure to mark a holiday or a co-worker's birthday with a potluck was inexcusable. Your unit may never order take-out or have a potluck, but you catch my drift.

Be present. A new graduate shouldn't have to hunt you down when they have a question -- you should be close enough to anticipate most questions and immediately address the others. So no taking two hour lunch breaks because "someone else is doing the work." You're not going to know that Suzy is sticking urine samples in the lunch refrigerator until after someone ELSE finds them if you're not paying attention. Or that Hortense is using clean gloves for sterile procedures because you forgot to show her the sterile gloves. I once witnessed a sentinel event from a distance of about 12 feet. All of the preceptors had gone to lunch together leaving six orientees alone with six fresh from the OR CABG patients. I was one of the orientees, switching jobs after a cross country move. I tried my best but I couldn't orient five new grads at once (nor was it my responsibility) and a patient died. That death still haunts me -- I hope it haunts those six preceptors as well.

Check their meds. Even a new graduate with the best of intentions and the most photographic memory can sometimes confuse digoxin and diltiazem -- and sometimes with fatal results. As a preceptor, you should know exactly what they're giving, when and to which patient. I got involved in something else one time and my orientee marched into a patient room and gave the 60 units of NPH insulin intended for the patient in room 2A to the patient in 2B. (Few mistakes are fatal if you own up to them right away and immediately set about mitigating the damage. But it did screw up the patient's day and the orientee's month.)

Teach to the best of your ability in the manner that your orientee learns best. One of my orientees could only seem to learn by getting her hands on. Showing her how to change a ventricular assist device dressing didn't seem to make an impact, but standing at her shoulder and talking her through it just once made her a pro. Another orientee was scared to death to touch a patient unless we first went over the procedure step by step with the written procedure in hand. Standing at Matilda's shoulder talking her through the procedure wouldn't have helped Matilda to learn unless she'd first read through the procedure, and Greta couldn't conceptualize the procedure by reading it without doing it.

If you find that you cannot teach your orientee in the way they best learn, perhaps it's time to let someone else give it a try. I tried and tried to explain how to do pacemaker checks to Amanda -- she became frustrated and convinced she was stupid, and I became frustrated and convinced I didn't know my stuff. I asked Stella if SHE could explain it so Amanda could understand it -- and she could. She used slightly different vocabulary and analogies and Amanda got it the first time. That said, I've also found that if you find you can't explain something to your orientee clearly enough that they can grasp it, it usually means you don't understand it as thoroughly as you thought you did.

And keep in mind that as you're teaching your orientee how to be a successful nurse, you're also learning something from them -- or at least you should be. I learned to communicate with developmentally delayed adults from a new nurse who had been a home health aide. Ed had been a sound technician before becoming a nurse, and taught me a lot about dopplers. Iza had gone to nursing school in the Philippines and during the months that she was my orientee she perfected my bed-making skills, showed me better ways to arrange linen and proved to me that even confused patients can be left neat and tidy at the end of your shift. (And if she'd been just a little slower to learn, making her orientation last a little longer, she could have taught me how she did that!) If you're not learning something from each person you precept, you're not doing it right.

I'm sure there are things I'm forgetting to mention here, so I'll welcome tips from all of you to help me become a better preceptor.

Specializes in Emergency Nursing.

One thing I BEG of preceptors or those appointing preceptors: PUHlease delegate the task of precepting to those who like to teach! My preceptor clearly did not like to teach! She was under the assumption that nurses come out of nursing school fully able to put 20g IVs in dehydrated 90 yr olds , draw blood cultures off of said 90 yr old, and know all protocol/procedures from the get go. I did my best to be kind and engaging for a few weeks. I then stated to her that she needed to TEACH me said things instead of assuming or speaking ill of me because I didn't know how to trouble shoot an IV pump or that a PTT needed to be drawn at x time during a heparing gtt rate change!

Preceptors of the world: If you don't like to teach and are in it for the money, beware of the future nurses you are producing!

Specializes in Med-surg, ICU.

I once had a preceptor at a psychiatric hospital here in the philippines. And we were so lucky to have a preceptor who doesn't have to say but "and you call yourself nurses", "can't you do your job for once", "think of the patient for crying out loud!", "how can you be a good nurse if you're doing that?". Very nice teaching skills which made my group think that psych nursing is a big no-no, and that psychiatric patients made our preceptor be that way. My favorite field of nursing, and got the worst experience.

And at one point we had a clinical instructor who always reminds us that "everything you do here, your license and my license is at stake!" literally everytime. Do you know what impact that did to us? And to top that off, she would accompany us, and i mean each and everyone of us, everytime we give an oral

Medicine while teaching us what to say to the patient, in front of the patient! Haha, get it? Even simple "omeprazoles" and "paracetamols" she doesn't trust us with.

With that said, i just hope

there are more professors who are comptetent enough to meet the needs of their trainees, not just professionally but also "emotionally".

Thank goodness for this article!!! I am into my third week of precepting, and the past couple of days have definitely had their moments. I don't have the worst preceptor in the world or anything, and I know its a tough task taking on a new nurse, but it's nice to hear that others have survived it feeling the same way I am!! I have no problem asking questions if I'm unsure about something, but my preceptor has her moments when she gets irritated and blows me off.. I've learned I have to wait and reapproach when she's in a better mood and has had a cigarette. I hate this because it makes me question myself and it rattles my confidence, and I often end up asking another nurse if they are available. I know that eventually I'll get through this (Lord be willing), and if I ever "precept" another nurse, I hope I can be as open and understanding as I'd want someone to be with me!

Specializes in none yet.

I hear you. I had a preceptor who needed a cig every 3-4 hours. I could tell by how her mood changed. I used to be a smoker so I know what that feels like. It's not you she is frustrated with, it is the craving for nicotine causing her to want to finish so she can get out for a smoke. So she gets cross. Other smokers will validate this.

I will give you some tips. 1. There is a schedule she follows (might not be written), you write it out, ask her if it is right, then follow it as much as possible. 2. Make your own notes of what you do each shift for patients even if you stay after the shift to do it. Take it home and study it. Think about what you could have done differently. Tell your preceptor you are doing this. Beg her, if necessary, to go over the list with you and see what she thinks about your decisions. 3. If you forget to do something or make a mistake, tell her immediately and ask what you can do to fix it. Then do it. We all make mistakes. 4. If you think she acts really unprofessional - see your nurse manager and ask if this is behavior is usual with her or if you are doing something to cause it. 5. As hard as it seems to do because after a difficult shift you may be feeling worthless as a possible nurse, ask her to spend time with you to tell you what you did well and what you are still having trouble with. Write down what she says. Tell her this is a list you will work on improving. 5. No matter how cold she seems during the shift, keep asking her questions. Your patients need the answers. 6. Get in touch with some of your classmates and find out how they feel. It will make you feel better if you find that others are feeling like you.

Hope you can use some of these. You are good. You learned the information you need. Your patients need you. Don't get down on yourself. Good luck.

I would really want a preceptor like you Ruby Vee:)

I had a terrible preceptor also :( Our school held clinical there and she was a nurse on the floor. She was assigned to do my precepting later. She told me right away before I started that my school didn't teach you anything and her nursing school prepared their students to start on the floor right away with no problem. I knew right away she was going to be trouble. She told me every issue each nurse on the floor had and had nothing good to say about them so I knew when my backed was turned....she was talking about me. If I asked her to show me something she grunted. She handed me my patients papers after report and sent me on my way. If I had a question, or needed to clarify she was very rude. Once I said " I have pushed meds with a Picc line before but maybe you could come with me", she floped her papers down and looked at another nurse as if I was stupid. At lunch time she involved other nurses in discussions and you could tell they were being manipulated into saying things they were not comfortable with. If I see her again now that I am an RN I will let her know how unprofessional her actions were and what a terrible nurse she is for putting her patients at risk just to watch a preceptee squirm.

I can very much relate to what you have experienced and I am experiencing it right now and I feel like quitting because its kind of depressing me the way my preceptor humiliates me in front of her co staff

Thank you for the great article. I am currently going through a preceptorship, and all I hear or read are horror stories. My experience so far has been nothing but pleasant. Maybe I'm just lucky, but so far everyone I have worked with has been patient, kind, and accepting.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
thank you for the great article. i am currently going through a preceptorship, and all i hear or read are horror stories. my experience so far has been nothing but pleasant. maybe i'm just lucky, but so far everyone i have worked with has been patient, kind, and accepting.

i honestly believe that you find what you're looking for, or to put it another way, you elicit the responses you get. so if you go around looking for the mean, bitter preceptor who eats her young, you're going to find that. even if that's the same preceptor that someone else thought was patient, kind and accepting. so kudos for you -- you're eliciting good responses!

Specializes in emergency, neuroscience and neurosurg..

Thank You Ruby!!!! I have been the preceptor and the oriented and witnessed the good and bad of both. I am even guilty of not being the best preceptor and difficult orientee in my career. What I have learned is all nurses are people and all people are different. The nurse the "catches on" the quickest or is over eager my not be the "best" nurse. Sometimes those that start slowly but keep going end up being the greatest nurses and future assets to their department, co-workers, and patients!

What an incredible post. I wish it was appropriate to give a copy of it to my preceptor when i get one, as a "please don't eat me:nailbiting:, just understand that i am a rookie:unsure:" plea,but I know it is not! I am currently looking for my first RN position and exposing my weak points to a seasoned nurse scares me witless because i am a perfectionist who knows that no one is perfect. I am very hard on myself and am hoping to get a preceptor who recognizes my effort and is there for me technically as well as holistically. I am very honest and know that the only way to get the most out my precepting experience is to be transparent. I want to learn to be a competent, confident nurse, without being torn down in the process. Are you available to come to CT Ruby?LOL!!! no really? :shy:

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

Great tips, thanks.

*I think this article should be revived*

Specializes in M/S, Pulmonary, Travel, Homecare, Psych..

I have precepted a lot. Most of my memories from it are good, but of course I have my low points with it as well.

The hospital I worked my first job with did not offer "preceptor training" specifically. The offered a more general "leadership" course that anyone could take. It helped, but was more focused on teamwork and dispute mediation than teaching. And not all preceptors took the course.

Lucky for me, I went through a short (one semester) phase where I thought I wanted to be a teacher. I have a couple education courses on my college transcripts and from them, I recalled the Seven Styles of learning. I applied my knowledge of them to my approach as a preceptor.

You touched on it yourself already, mentioning how some learn by doing, and others like to watch first time.

I found it was imperative to identify whether the orientee prefers social or solitary learning. For me, this was always step one and everything that happened after branched off of this.

Some like to go around the unit with different people doing different things. I might have one of the aids introduce them to the other aids, let respiratory show them how to call for a STAT treatment, and a member of PT was always willing to teach them how to look at the therapy schedule on the computer. Often, I'd not take lunch with this nurse, put them on a time slot with others.

On the other hand, solitary learners will be overwhelmed by all that. They do better when you become their shadow and keep things 1:1 as much as possible. I'd do everything with them and let them warm up to co-workers as they go along. We'd take lunches together. If there was something happening with a pt on another assignment they needed to see, I'd go with them.

As you said, being an effective preceptor is so much more than just saying "And this is how we put a Foley in."