clinical instructor calls me air head

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Hi everyone,

This is my first post although I come to these forums often when I feel like I need some enlightening myself on other matters and have received a lot of constructive, intelligent, and helpful input from these forums.

I am seeking genuine advise and input for something I truly don't know how to correct or understand.

I am an undergrad BSN student Second Degree in an accelerated program. I am doing well academically. I just had my evaluation today for my first clinical experience in med surge.

My instructor gave me the highest ratings for every category. I was very excited and feeling confident and happy. Then she dropped the bomb...

...She said that I was in LaLa land or seemed to be in LaLa land half the time and that I come across as an air head. She even called me air head in front of my fellow classmates. She said that when she got the report from the RNs on the floor, they all said that I was an air head and seemed like I was not focused. When I asked her to give me some specific examples so that I could correct the matter, she said she didn't know of any examples and that none were given. I asked again if she could recall something I did that would give that impression. She said nothing that she can remember, it just seems that I'm in LaLa land. She said that all the nurses she got the report from told her that I am not focused. Yet, my evaluation was excellent.

The truth is, I am extremely focused and good at multitasking. I never lagged behind and always got my charting done on time. I've seen some of the nurses make some pretty big mistakes like allowing a colonoscopy bag to break open on the patient b/c it got too full and one nurse even wanted to start up the NG tube again right after giving meds. I never said anything to them or my instructor about it.

One of the doctors came in the room just before I had a chance to enter my patient's room and asked me why the client was on contact precaution. I couldn't tell him b/c I hadn't even looked at her chart yet. He yelled at me and said, "You're the student, YOU should know that!!" Then he proceeded to walk into the client's room without gowning or gloving down himself! He went and told my teacher that I didn't know why my patient was on contact precaution. Another incident was when I was getting the report from the RN before going in to see my patient. I was asking her standard questions regarding the patient. The nurse next to her rolled her eyes at me and said, "Sweet heart, you need to do your assessments." I told her that we are instructed to get the report before we do our assessments. She acted like I didn't know what I was doing.

I am sitting here with my head tilted like a confused puppy trying to figure out how I got a near perfect evaluation and yet I'm an "air-head."

Is it possible that I just simply have a dumb look on my face and don't know it? Or is it possible I come off like an air head and if so, how the heck to I fix that? Should I tape my eyebrows to my skull and purse my lips so that I look more brilliant? Should I wear a pocket organizer maybe? lol! ok, that's really not funny, but seriously, there is nothing worse than not instilling confidence in others especially when you chose the most trusted profession as a career.

Any advise or input or words of wisdom would be appreciated.

Thank you,

MS911

Midnight, this is excellent, solid, state of the art advise! LOL! I try not to ask her a lot of questions b/c I think she's busy and sometimes she gets angry if someone doesn't understand her b/c she speaks very broken English and she speaks very fast. Sometimes when I don't understand her, she calls me lala land and gets angry. But when she keeps saying that in front of other people, they will start thinking it's true; she shouldn't do that. I hadn't thought of smiling to passer-bys and you're right, when I'm thinking I look off and not at a paper or book. I'm going to be very aware of the impressions I give others and thank you for the great advise. I really like this forum.

MS

I can't imagine why anyone would tell a very qualified individual that they'll never make it as a nurse. A nurse who makes a remark like that should never have become a nurse. tsk. I will prove them wrong and I'm glad you did too. thank you, ~MS

Meltnpoint, my thoughts exactly! You couldn't have said it better. I was thinking, didn't he read the report on his patient?

Specializes in EDUCATION;HOMECARE;MATERNAL-CHILD; PSYCH.

i really do not agree that you should change your looks or yourself so that you will be perceived as a professional. nursing has come a long way for that. what your clinical instructor said to you is unacceptable. it is professional bullying and verbal abuse. as a nursing student, you are there to learn. part of learning is asking questions. as an experienced nurse, i have had many situations similar to your experiences. i always acknowledge that i do not know all the answers. however, i will not tolerate rudeness from my colleagues and other healthcare providers.

next time, i suggest that you do not call your instructor names or get angry. however, you need to meet with her and let her know that what she said to you is demeaning. since she is from another country, she may not know that calling you an "air head" may be insulting.

let her know about your experiences with the rude doctor and the "eye rolling" nurse. ask her how you should behave next time if you are in the same situation. one of the objectives of clinical is learning how to behave professionally when interacting with patients, families, and colleagues.

if your clinical instructor continues to insult you, you should put it in writing, and copy it to the dean or director of the school. you can even ask to go with another instructor. doing clinical is anxiety provoking. you do not need insulting remarks and behaviors.

if you do not appropriately confront this instructor, she may not know that she is being inappropriate, and she will continue her unprofessional verbal abuse and bullying. she may deter other students from continuing in nursing.

with your wit and intelligence, i am sure that you will handle this appropriately. good luck!

Hello Chiandre,

I couldn't agree with you more that this situation was bullying and was not a professional way to handle a student nurse who is learning.

I didn't really insult or get angry with my clinical instructor. She was sharing with us about some of her "blunders" and I said, "oh, you mean like I Love Lucy?" When ever she called me air head, I smiled and told her that I will learn the material well and she shouldn't say that. She got quiet and was sensitive about it and kept asking me if I was ok, then she started making a joke of it and calling me LaLa land. She said she does that b/c she is pushing me hard to be successful although name calling is not a constructive way to push people.

I have in the past brought some things to the attention of the "higher-ups" re:student issues and it went over like a fart in Church quite frankly. The University Administrative bodies don't generally want to hear complaints from students. The less your name runs across their desk, the better. Previous situations of speaking out have backfired on me and so I have learned to stay quiet and not make waves. If I had spoken up, rest assured, it would get back to the individuals I was referring to and I'd be at the bottom of a hill looking up at an avalanche of defense mechanisms. Ouch.

I don't know if anyone who has responded to my posts (and you Chiandre for confirming that I am not the only one who has made mistakes in the learning process and that my instructor's behavior was not acceptable) knows just how much they have helped me to move forward and become successful. I took what all of you have said and pondered it, formulated a list that put me into proactive gear and became more aware of how I am perceived by others. At first I thought, maybe they just don't like my socks... :) But then after reading your posts, I realized I had to solidify a problem, chose a solution and go with that. I may be able to "fix" the situation or I may not, but I won't stop trying.

The most difficult part of nursing is not caring for the patients, but dealing with co-workers, am I right? Hmmm, yeah? I'm right, right? I know. lol!

Many, many thanks to you for your support and very, very excellent and professional advise!

MS

Specializes in Oncology.

My med-surg clinical instructor was harsh on me. In the end, it made it easier for me because I learned how to work under that kind of supervisor. As I've gone on in school, I've found that many of them are much less strict yet appreciate my standards.

I hope she bears it and doesn't bare it. If she bares it, she might be escorted from the premises and face the end of nursing school. Although I could see how she might want to bare her rear end at them for their persnickety criticisms. :p

hahhaah i just realized it's supposed to be "bear"

:D

I don't mind harsh, I just don't want others to hear her calling me air head, nursing students can eat their young and the last thing I need is for an instructor to validate their tendencies to gossip. Future job prospects for that hospital probably don't look great either if I'm pegged as unfocused person.

thanks for your reply,

MS

oh and another thing, about the doctor asking you why the patient was on contact isolation. you're the student, you should know? how about he's the DOCTOR, you think he would know?!?!

You gotta realize that a patient may have a cardiology consult, pulmonary consult, renal consult, infectious disease consult, etc. The doctor who came to see him may have been consulted for cardiac reasons, and may just be on call for the primary cardiologist..hence he has no history or information on the patient. Same as when an FNP rounds for a doctor, they may not know the patient and may have not been given any report aside from the reason for consult. :up:

OMG I don't even know you and I feel like we should be best friends. My instructor called me dingy and spastic a few weeks ago. I have never been so offended. I always have near perfect evaluations, BUT I'm dingy and spastic. I'm not even sure what that means! I'm always calm around the patient and in the hospital setting in general. This instructor LOVES to personally attack me, of all people. I don't know why but she's been that way since the day I met her...guess I wore the wrong color shirt that day. Anyway, a few weeks ago another instructor harangued me because I hadn't been doing my nurse's notes every two hours. This was my pediatric clinical instructor. She explained to me that legally, we are supposed to have nurse's notes done every two hours. I'm sorry but I don't have a license yet! My paperwork I hand in for a grade are not legal documents! THEN she said that my nursing notes were all wrong. She wanted to know why I documented that the patient had eaten but not ambulated. I didn't need to write that he/she had eaten, but I HAD to write that he/she had ambulated. I'm sorry but I have med surg, obstetric, and pediatric clinical all in one semester and when one instructor is telling me to write EVERY detail on my nurse's notes and another instructor wants to know why I didn't write down the patient had ambulated, I tend to scratch my head and my eyes glaze over a little.

oh and another thing, about the doctor asking you why the patient was on contact isolation. you're the student, you should know? how about he's the DOCTOR, you think he would know?!?!.

Maybe he did know. We never found out the whole story. It could be that the patient was no longer on or was never on precaution. Personally, I wouldn't gown up and enter a patient's room and perform care without knowing why they're on contact precaution. Just doesn't make sense to me. That's blindly following an order without knowing all the facts. I read the chart front to back the day before care and then check the doc's progress notes, labs, and MAR for any changes that might have occured over night. I don't think that particular incident is being an "air-head" its just a little irresponsible. I don't mean to sound harsh but I think this might be what their referring to and its a very common mistake for beginning nursing students. I've done something dumb or "air-headish" every clinical because I'm a little nervous and I lose focus. My clinical instructors don't call me names though...I think they realize it's a normal part of learning this profession. Sucks your instructors and nurse preceptors aren't as understanding

OMG so it doesn't get better? sheesh. Well, thanks for sharing, now I know to look out for that in my future clinicals! I'm sorry this happened to you, but I somehow feel better that I'm not alone.

take care,

MS

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