Advice for new soon-to-be instructor

Specialties Educators

Published

Specializes in Primary Care.

I just accepted a clinical instructor job at a local tech school for their LPN program. I'm ecstatic to have this amazing opportunity. I have my BSN, with 2.5 years medical-oncology experience, and will be starting MSN studies next month. This will be the perfect job while I pursue my master's degree.

My biggest concern is having all the answers. There will be things I am rusty on, and I'm scared for the times I won't have an answer. I'm also just generally nervous as it's taking on a brand new kind of nursing.

Any advice will be greatly appreciated!

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

I enjoyed teaching clinicals for many years although recently the BSN crowd has been a bit on the entitled, "I'm going to grad school so I really don't need to know how to do any of these lowly tasks" so I would think LPNs will be refreshing especially because they are so skill oriented. What I always try to do is give real world tips, the things that they will actually need to do as a nurse.

If you don't know the answer a simple "thats a great question, lets figure it out" and I'd get out my cell phone to research what they asked. I think you will be surprised at how much you actually do know. Congratulations and enjoy. The upcoming nurses deserve and need enthusiastic instructors.

Specializes in psych, addictions, hospice, education.

You don't have to know everything. That's what they invented books, the internet, and other people for. Just work, with the students, to figure out where to find the answer...

Specializes in Primary Care.

If you don't know the answer a simple "thats a great question, lets figure it out" and I'd get out my cell phone to research what they asked. I think you will be surprised at how much you actually do know. Congratulations and enjoy. The upcoming nurses deserve and need enthusiastic instructors.

Thank you both! I feel a little less pressure to have all the answers. I'm very excited about this new opportunity. I had gotten to work with students several times while I was a floor nurse, but was often too overburdened with a heavy caseload to really work with the students. Now students get ALL of my attention :-)

Specializes in Medical Surgical/Addiction/Mental Health.

You will never know all of the answers. Here is what I do to help ensure students get the correct answers and that I do not become overwhelmed:

  1. I create a parking lot.” Students who ask questions to which I do not know the answers are placed in the parking lot. I have sat a deadline of getting the students the answers before the beginning of the next class. However, I typically will e-mail answers within 24 hours.
  2. On the first day of class, I log onto my employer's (clinical job) intranet. We have a tab specifically for changes in clinical practice. I narrow the dates to within the last six months. Generally, there are over 100 new changes in policy/practice. I then state something like, You see…because healthcare is always changing, there is no way to know everything” It gives the students a real perspective of EBP and how often we change clinical practice. It also establishing credibility in the beginning.

Good luck in your new position and with your MSN!

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