Re: Nurse Educator Chronicles: Gladys
You're the kind of teacher who really allows students to succeed, and I'm so grateful to have people like you out there!
While I was doing my care aid course, our regular teacher had to leave halfway through the semester due to an injury and we were left with (sorry to say this, it's terrible but everyone in class agreed with me) a sort of "bottom-of-the-barrel" nurse who was not a teacher before and who probably shouldn't have even been a nurse. Her and I got along just fine during the theory of the course but when we arrived in clinical, but when we got out to the care homes, for whatever reason she *went after me* like a freaking shark! Everything I did was wrong. After a couple of weeks she threatened to fail me, and I called up the program coordinator to ask if she could do that this early in the practicum. Well he came in to talk to her, because she wasn't allowed to do that and threatening such a thing really does damage to a student's confidence. Well having her get in trouble just made things worse, and eventually my mistakes from being so nervous got worse and worse until finally she failed me.
When I got back into the course next semester (only having to re-do the clinical and practicum, not the theory thank goodness), I was a nervous wreck. I was petrified. I was introduced to the new teacher, however, and she was like a beacon of hope! She was so kind and understanding, positive and encouraging. She told me the same thing you told your student- "I haven't read why you didn't graduate last semester. I chose not to even look at any of your previous work reports or records; we're going to start over. Don't be nervous, don't be worried, I'm going to judge you based on the actions I see personally and no one else's opinion is going to get in the way of that!"
I did SO well that semester, and I lay so much of that on her shoulders because of how comfortable she made me feel! 1 in maybe 20 or 25 people thrive on teachers pushing them or "challenging" them, telling them they can't do it or telling them they're not doing well enough, but you know what? The rest of us need a little bit of trust, someone to believe in us and encourage us! I know that's rarely realistic but it goes a long, long, long way.
Nursing News