What Graduate Nurses Need To Know About Nursing

My co-workers and I were sitting at the nurse's station the other morning after a rough 12-hour shift. It was the first time we had sat for longer than 10 minutes all night long. We were sleepy, exhausted and a tad irritated. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

As we sat resting our poor feet, the student nurses arrived on the floor. Taking in their crisp white uniforms, we glanced down at our wrinkled scrubs. Noticing their bright, shiny faces, I sneaked a peak at my co-workers. Our hair hung in our faces, mascara streaked under our eyes and on top of that, we could barely put three words together to form a sentence. We were whooped!

I spoke first.

"I remember those days."

My fellow nurses nodded agreeably.

My charge nurse spoke next.

"Should we tell them to run now...before it's too late?"

We all laughed, then instantly sobered.

I got to thinking....If I were a nursing student again, what would I want to know? What would have made my transition from student to graduate nurse easier? If I were mentoring a student, what would I tell them?

I would tell them that being a nurse means you have met your goal. You did it! You are now one of us. So jump in, hold on and get ready for the ride of your life.

As a nurse, you are required to be many things: We are teachers. Doctors do not have time to teach patients what they need to know about their condition. That's where nurses come in. You will learn how to do a little teaching each time you are face to face with your patients. We are counselors. At times, we must help our patients and their families to utilize coping skills. Sometimes all we need to do is listen. Sometimes, we are the enemy. Some patients really do not like to be told what to do. Sometimes they are angry or scared. They will lash out...at you.

Nurses do not learn everything they need to know in the first day, the first week, the first month. There is a steep learning curve. Give yourself time to adjust to your first job. Don't beat yourself up because you don't think that you are learning fast enough. AND don't let others beat you up either. If someone seems to be giving you a hard time, tell them nicely and with a smile, "I am still learning".

As a nurse, you will learn to use every resource at your disposal. That means fellow nurses, reference books, the pharmacist, the social worker, and the doctors. After a while, you will learn who enjoys sharing their knowledge, and who doesn't.

As a nurse, you will be witness to miracles and to mayhem. You will learn to be compassionate, but strong. Sometimes challenges will invigorate you and some will exhaust you. Be cautious when making friends with fellow nurses. Be aware that not everyone is as they seem. If your work environment feels stifling and toxic, it probably is. Staying positive in a toxic environment is extremely difficult. Don't feel bad if you decide to leave for greener pastures.

As a nurse, you will have good days and bad. You will see people at their best and at their worst. Sometimes it will seem as if you aren't making a difference, but even if you touch one person's life, you have done your job.

Specializes in Med-Surg, HH, Tele, Geriatrics, Psych.

Hey you all! I found a great article on Monster.com about being a stand out nursing student. Check it out. By the way, thanks for all the nice remarks. Bugaloo

Hi there,

I'm soon to be a graduate nurse, in my last semester now, and reading your comments/suggestions was a pleasure!! Thanks for taking the time to share your observations.

:yeah:

JerseyGuy,

Thank you.

Thank you for this article...I am a new nurse...I havent found a job yet.....but this will help me dearly!!!!

"I am afraid of getting walked on even more than I already am. Not only do I get walked on by most of my instructors, who I swear play so many mind-games with us (my ex-marine dad seems to think so after the stories I've told him). I get it from the staff at the community hospital where we do our clinical, who will deliberately steal your pt's MAR so that you look bad for not being able to admin meds or will walk away while you are mid sentence trying to tell them about your pt's recent change in LOC. Then I also get it from my fellow class mates who are such perfectionists that they will insult you to your face or behind your back if you question your knowledge either to one of them or to the instructor in front them. I don't pretend to know something when I do not. Isn't that dangerous?"

Dear Spookycat,

I couldn't agree w/ you more!!! Can someone please tell us what we can do to improve this situation so good students can concentrate on nursing and not nursing non-professionalism. I want to be a good nurse and not someone who graduated because she knew how to double cross , backstab, and sabatoge her fellow students.

And please tell me why ADN programs are more about flushing students as opposed to teaching them? My class of 60 students- 45 of which have B.S. degrees in other fields. Some were medics in the military. We are not stupid- just naive and green. We are paying alot of money , forgoing many pleasures of life, sacrificing and living off credit cards just for the priviledge to one day call ourselves nurses. There is cetainly a demand for us when we graduate- so why sooo many sandbox games?

If the public knew what nursing school was really about they would stop funding them.

whew!!!.. i just submitted an article about going into reality after all those trainings gained from school.. as what you said its like an answer to what im all asking. on how to deal with the actual field of nursing. i mean a new comer to the world of professionals.. thanks for sharing anyway.. its very tough to be working with people, as a team. And its like the same thing we were still student.. yes we are learning.. we are nurses and we are bound to be with knowledge, skills, and attitude flexible enough to deal with circumstances.. but we are human.. still within the parameters of mistakes.. and i know that all of us either new or old enough with experiences could at least still involve in the process of learning new things..

Specializes in aged -adolescent.

Hey spookycat don't go. I am much older than you, I graduated at 57 after a long and arduous course. I work in the school sector. I didn't do a postgrad unfortunately, I wish I'd been able to I would have come more equipped. Sometimes even co workers you feel are friendly will wait until there's a student in front of you to make you feel small. If you do something successfully and make a good call they will tell you the next day of the few things you didn't achieve. That's life. Sometimes it sucks and other times when I work alone or with another worker it is great, you feel valued and you know the students respond to you. I wouldn't give up my job for anything. Stick around the world needs you.

Specializes in Geriatrics, Orthopedics, Occ Health.

I just wanted to add that as a newer RN, I try to take the time to thank the nursing students on my floor when they help out. As a student, you always worry that you're doing something wrong or being judged, so it's nice to hear someone say "good job" or other nice things once in a while!

Specializes in Oncology, Medical.

Just in time, I'm about to graduate soon. Future RN here I come! It is really tough as I have been observed. I don't know if I can make it but it seems that this is the job that I want no matter how hard it is. Thanks for sharing your article. :)

Very well said.

This is a great article posted! I actually printed it out and gave it to everyone in my class !Thank you!:wink2:

im a student nurse and i find your article helpful. thanks