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Dear Nursing Instructor,
I want to remind you that at some point in your life you were in my shoes. Remember your first day of class? You were nervous, scared, and maybe wondering "Am I really made for nursing?"
You were handed a syllabus, and quickly went to work planning your schedule for the days to come. The thought of all the chapters you need to read, and understand. "How am I going to process all of this," you thought?
Maybe nursing was a breeze for you. Maybe you failed out and had to give it another try. A year or two later there you are walking across the stage in your nursing uniform holding your candle in remembrance of the mother of nursing Florence Nightingale. Remember how excited you were to get pinned. Oh the tears of joys that you finally made it!
Years have now passed by, and you have decided to become a nurse educator. However you forgot some things. What it is like to be a student. Some students are new to the health field; others are here looking for a second career, or a better life for their family. We all come from different walks of life.
Yes we know and may have heard all the horror stories of nursing. Does nursing school really have to be a horror story? Do you have to yell at your new nursing students on the first day? Is it appropriate to tell your students your not cut out for this? Do you as an instructor have to meet a quota every semester on who you can weed out?
I am a student here to learn. Yes, sometimes some students make it all the way through there preq's thinking "I can fly straight through nursing with no problem." However, some of us are not like that. We want to learn! We want what you have: a state board license!
We have sacrificed our lives and loved ones just to make it to the end of the program. However, some of us don't make it through the first few semesters. As students we do take the blame for our faults and short comings. I know I do. However being manipulated, taunted, yelled at, curse at, and treated like a nobody is not what I signed up for.
Let me give you an example of what some instructors have done in my presence. I had a class mate whose period came on during our lab at the school. We are told that while we are in clinical lab we are not allowed to go to the bathroom, only when we are given break.
She fell ill and told the instructors what was going on. In her defense, she has periods that come when they want, 2 times a month maybe once every 3 months. Nevertheless, she informed said professors on what was going, and got permission to leave the class. She had a mess on her clothes which caused her to leave the class for a second time in 30 mins. She was withdrawn by the Dean because she should have had a Dr.'s note.
I had a similar situation. I heavy a menstruation (due to Essure) sometimes as well, and in my first semester I had an accident as well my clothes. I had to sit for 30 minutes thank goodness before I could leave. All because of that stupid rule. I was embarrassed some, but hey we're all nursing students right. Thank God I lived 5 mins away from school.
My point is: is it really that serious not to have your class interrupted because of an emergency? If that is not an excuse. Please be sympathetic towards your students if deemed necessary, ie. student who found out her father had a heart attack, and is at the hospital fighting for his life. You have now put this student in the position to choose her class time and not risk being dropped from her class, or her dying father. Did you have any unusual emergencies as a student?
As a student we are held responsible for actions. We look to you for guidance and a great learning experience. Why are you so mean? Do you have to eat your young?
Now, now, I'm going to get a lot of comments on how nursing is to be taken seriously. "We have patient lives in our hands". I get that. I have 7 years of healthcare background in a very busy trauma one hospital. I know how stressful nursing can get and how overworked some nurses are, but I'm talking about teaching here. Teaching does not have to be so cruel and intimidating. I'm not saying you have to hold our hands and talk softly, and give us a high five for remembering small or big details. Treat me like a student who wants to learn what you are willing to give.
I just want you ask my instructor, the one I look to for educational needs, to remember what it was like when you were in our shoes.
Respectfully Submitted,
Fearless_Leader
P.S. For the Instructors who do care for their students, and do want them to succeed, we appreciate all you do.
I don't think the OP was trying to excuse tardiness or flippant behavior- but not allowing students to use the restroom? Sorry- I draw the line there as well. A large number of nursing students are woman of child bearing age, and menstruation can be heavy enough to need more restroom breaks that one is given during lab (our labs were 6 hours long- we got 2 breaks) - before my ablation I had periods where literally needed to change q30 minutes because I would overflow (that was with super heavy, super long over night pads as backup). Sorry, no woman should be expected to sit in messy clothes and 'suck it up'. In what other professional is that acceptable expectations?
The professor DID let the student use the restroom, though. The mess on the student's clothes came AFTER the unscheduled bathroom break and required leaving class completely to go home and get clothes. In my state, each student is required to spend at least an exact number of hours in order to meet licensing requirements by the board. Suppose the school the OP goes to doesn't put much wiggle room in the schedule. Maybe this unexcused absence brought the student below the required number of hours.
If any of us has an actual opinion on this student's pending removal from the program, it's based on speculation only. I know I'm in the minority here with my opinion, but I find students coming and going throughout class to be extremely distracting. An instructor's job description includes providing an environment that is conducive to learning (to the best of the instructor's abilities, understanding, of course, they can't control everything, like comfort of chairs). One thing they are able to do is limit interruptions and distractions. They should do this, if they can.
Telling the class they need to wait until scheduled breaks is reasonable. Accommodating period oopsies and diarrhea disasters is also reasonable, and the professor did that. The student was unprepared for an event that they could have predicted might happen at any given moment. If I left during my shift to go change my scrubs, my boss would tell me don't bother coming back.
Because, seriously, nursing school is supposed to develop professional, respectable, respectful, organized, prepared, disciplined, well-reasoned nurses. Do you think this school wants to turn out graduates that will leave management of facilities scratching their heads saying, "how did this girl even get through nursing school? She can't even manage her period! How is she going to manage patients?!"
I need to back away from my tangent, I know, but this whole situation is absurd. This is REAL COLLEGE in GROWN UP WORLD. Behave accordingly.
I understand what you all are saying- I always had carried around extra supplies in my backpack because my periods were so frequent I had months where I would only go 9 days in between. I actually had the ablation one afternoon after class, and was at clinical next morning (don't something I recommend)-- because it was so difficult managing my period and my school schedule (not to mention the pain). Luckily- I was never questioned of punished for needed to take extra bathroom breaks in class/labs and clinicals.
The callousness demonstrated by the first responder to this thread is amazing...and not in a good way. I come a family of nurses and nurse instructors and I have heard the stories of nursing students not taking the study seriously. However, in my opinion, no one's integrity should be up for grabs to tarnish. To make a student sit in their own body fluids until a bathroom break gives me concern.
Teach the subject and remember no one's body (or their fluids) is on your schedule. Also, please share when your loved one died or fell ill while nursing class was going on? How did you stay focused when you got the word that they were ill or could die? Instead of defending your callousness, share your point of view on ways female students can keep their menstruation under control! You're a nurse first, REMEMBER!!!
I'm going to go out on a limb here and violate TOS. (Sorry, mods. Bare with me - I might not be, actually.)
OP and other female of the OP's story, hormonal birth control isn't just for preventing babies. The benefits of hormonal birth control for regulating period and decreasing flow are immeasurable for those of us who have such unpredictable periods.
Please, please, please consider discussing this with either your PCP or OB/MW. (Perhaps throwing that part in means I'm not giving medical advice here! This is actually career advice, I promise!) I know we've gotten rowdy about this (okay, maybe just I have???), but the main take home point here is that as an adult, you NEED to get period issues under control. NOW. It's not acceptable to have period issues (predictably unpredictable ones count) when you're a grown up. Hormonal birth control can be a god send for you. There are very low hormone versions that will give you very few, if any, side effects. If your flow is heavy and unpredictable, this may actually make it possible to get through a shift with minimal discomfort and flow. Talk to your doctor/NP/MW!
lifelearningrn, BSN, RN
2,622 Posts
I don't think the OP was trying to excuse tardiness or flippant behavior- but not allowing students to use the restroom? Sorry- I draw the line there as well. A large number of nursing students are woman of child bearing age, and menstruation can be heavy enough to need more restroom breaks that one is given during lab (our labs were 6 hours long- we got 2 breaks) - before my ablation I had periods where literally needed to change q30 minutes because I would overflow (that was with super heavy, super long over night pads as backup). Sorry, no woman should be expected to sit in messy clothes and 'suck it up'. In what other professional is that acceptable expectations?