Expert advice on passing your 1st semester

Published

I am now an expert on passing your first semester of nursing school, having just done it myself. (you'd see me wink here if you saw me in person)

Here's what you need to know:

1. Just getting to the first day of class is a big first step. Wading through all of the assorted paperwork and requirements is its own good preparation for what you are up against. Get in the habit of reading all directions carefully. Twice.

2. Get there early on day one and sit in the front. This will assist you greatly in step 3.

3. When any of your instructors are talking, shut your mouth and listen. Believe it or not, the things your instructors say are much more likely to help you than the things your classmates say. If you are a bit less polite than me, you might want to firmly instruct your classmates in this same idea early on.

4. Read your textbooks carefully. Sometime during the semester you will figure out that nursing tests are not like other tests. Many of the questions will be about what YOU should do. So pay attention to those sorts of things. Know when you should be washing your hands, when you should or shouldn't put on a mask, etc. You'll need to study the other things too, but really focus in on those nursing actions when you study.

5. Study early, often and regularly. While you probably don't need to spend every waking hour studying, it would be good to read your chapters before class, review after class, have a regular time each day for study, and find that extra time right before each exam as you can.

6. Skills. If you have skill check-off sheets like my program does, just memorize them word for word. Start doing this ASAP. You can pretend they are lines you have to learn for a play. Even if you don't understand all of the words now or don't know exactly what you should be doing on each step, just go ahead and start learning it anyway. This will save you lots of grief and heartache.

7. Clinicals. If you have clinicals during your first semester, whatever you do, don't be shy. If you have ever spent time in a hospital as a patient, or even just spending significant time with someone else who was a patient, think about whether the doctors and nurses asked you if you wanted to have your vitals taken or wanted your wound looked at. No. They just said, "I'm going to take a look at you now." That's going to be you now. You can be polite in how you say things, both to the patient and to the staff, but you really need to just jump in there. If a nurse or doctor is there with you go ahead and ask them questions about what they are doing. They normally won't mind. Or just tell them you'd like to watch and then move into a good position to see. This is the whole purpose of you being there, to practice your patient care skills and to learn from others.

8. Technology. For the most part technology will be your enemy in nursing school. Turn off your phone at the beginning of class and leave it off until after class. Leave your laptop at home. Take notes with paper and pencil. There are several studies showing that students perform far better on exams when they take notes by hand, as well as studies showing big drops in performance when the temptations of messing around during class are available. Give yourself every advantage you can here.

9. Be pleasant and polite. This means with everyone. Make every effort to treat your instructors well. Don't gossip about them after class. Same for your classmates. And the nurses at your clinical site. You will need to work with these people and they will play a big role in determining how you do. Some of them will be easy and some will be difficult, but treat all of them well.

10. Mistakes. This is probably the most important bit of advice. Mistakes are your biggest learning opportunities. While its preferable to learn from other people's mistakes, you'll make plenty of your own. Don't get mad when one of your mistakes is pointed out. That's how you are going to learn. Don't get mad when you get a test question wrong. You can argue about it and discuss it, but your main goal should be to figure out why your instructors thought the OTHER answer was the RIGHT one. Ask about what would happen if you made a mistake in various scenarios.

Good luck to everyone getting started in school and those who are continuing like me. Feel free to add other bits of wisdom below as well.

Great tips other than I would like to say I personally love my technology. I recorded lectures and doing that allowed my to listen intently to what my instructor was saying randomly scribbling down important tiny tidbits. Don't write till your hand hurts just stuff to remind you of what key points were. then I would go home and relisten the lecture. I am auditory so it's the only way for me if I take tons of notes I'm not getting anything. After fundamentals was over I picked up Saunders NCLEX review guide I believe 5th edition and it is all I used to study from, all through my program . Ah 1st semester like going to a foreign land learning a new culture.

Great tips other than I would like to say I personally love my technology. I recorded lectures and doing that allowed my to listen intently to what my instructor was saying randomly scribbling down important tiny tidbits. Don't write till your hand hurts just stuff to remind you of what key points were. then I would go home and relisten the lecture. I am auditory so it's the only way for me if I take tons of notes I'm not getting anything. After fundamentals was over I picked up Saunders NCLEX review guide I believe 5th edition and it is all I used to study from, all through my program . Ah 1st semester like going to a foreign land learning a new culture.

Was one voice recorder sufficient for a few hours worth of lecture for one class during the day?

did you ever need more than one recorder for a full day of classes?

The 10th edition has the 2012-2014 NANDA diagnoses while the 9th edition has the 2009-2011 NANDA diagnoses. But I know we have the 2015-2017 NANDA diagnoses now so I'm assuming an 11th edition is in the works. The 10th edition was a required text my first semester, and I've used it for every care plan I've written. It helps me organize information and understand the nursing process.[/quote']

So it would be better to get the updated version if you could ?

Was one voice recorder sufficient for a few hours worth of lecture for one class during the day?

did you ever need more than one recorder for a full day of classes?

Hi 1 was enough yes and it had multiple folders so after each break I would start a new recording made it easier to listen in chunks. I also recorded on my iPhone when I got it then I listened to it when driving around or waiting for my kids at their stuff.

Specializes in PCA.

If you had to choose one book to study from to gather basic information that you would need for the program, which would you choose? A&P or Pathophysiology?

I recommend Saunders NCLEX review. You do your A&P in prereq's so you already have that knowledge. For the actual program I Saunders is the way to go

Specializes in PCA.

9781437708257_p0_v1_s260x420.JPG

I actually already have this book, if this is the one you're referring to! So you recommend this, even over the pathophys book?

Thank you so much for taking the time to share this!

Yes absolutely because your no longer needing to explain the pathophysiology you should understand that and if you need a refresher as we all do then you can google it. Saunders also explains it for you if need be. After the 1st half of the 1st semester (where my oxygen was my fundamentals book) Saunders was my all and my study buddy and I did pretty well I can't preach enough SAUNDERS SAUNDERS SAUNDERS LOL.

Specializes in PCA.

Awesome, thank you! I started going through it last week and writing my own notes on it. I haven't got through much of it, so I wasn't sure exactly what was in it. I'll definitely keep this one handy! Thanks again.

I lived on it and power points

When does the care planning homework begin?

I've read that the nursing diagnosis handbook 9th edition by ackley is really good but it was from 2011. There's a 2013, 10th edition now. Does it matter which edition we buy for more accuracy?

I have the 2011, and its a great text book. All the diagnosis come from NANDA. If you get the older book, just make sure you have access to the most current NANDA.

+ Join the Discussion