Originally Posted by msdobson
From where I've been sitting the last 25 years, Karen, this art died of an internal hemorrhage.
Kids these days can't fill out the basic job application...most can't even spell resume, much less follow the rules and format.
Mike
Excuse me? I'm guessing that the person posting this statement doesn't know much about what it takes to get in to nursing school or to get through nursing school these days. After all, technologies have advanced in every medical field out there in the last 25 years, and today's nursing students have been extensively educated with knowledge that did not even exist 25 years ago. The sheer volume of knowledge that nursing students today must absorb about every single field of nursing is outrageous and constantly growing at exorbitant rates. With NCLEX continuing to raise their standards for what it takes to become a nurse, insisting that today's new grads have a strong grasp of all of these new technologies in every field of nursing (knowledge that most current nurses do not know of), the new grad nurses that are starting jobs this year and in the past few years are many of the best educated new graduate nurses to ever hit the job market.
On top of this fact, the extensive competition to get in to nursing school is also ensuring that only the best and the brightest actually become nurses. I know in my graduating class, approximately 60% of my fellow students and I already have at least a Bachelor's degree in another field, and some are even lawyers and engineers coming back to begin new careers. Furthermore, today students must take the NLN Nursing Entrance Exam (similar to the ACT or SAT), and their scores determine their eligibility for the program. In my program, the students who make it in to our program typically score in the 80th percentile (nationally) or above.
So clearly, the new graduate nurses hitting today's job market are some of this generation's best and brightest. They are far more educated in both most fields of nursing and many fields outside of nursing than most nurses of the previous generation were. So to state that today's new graduate nurses, or "kids" as you call them, cannot even fill out a simple job application is grossly inappropriate. A more accurate statement might be that many nurses from older generations cannot understand how to work a computer well enough to fill out the electronic job applications that most hospitals require now.
Today's new graduate nurses are extremely bright and well educated. They have the education, and now they are looking for the experience. We hope that nurses of previous generations will welcome us into the profession and orient us well so that we can continue the tradition of delivering quality nursing care.
This is a job board to help new graduate nurses get hired in what is becoming an increasingly competitive job market. While there are countless openings in the job market for experienced nurses, the number of openings for new graduates is extremely limited, and these new graduates are simply trying to get the experience so that they can become adept and experienced nurses.
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