Fear-mongering in nursing school

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Coming on here just to vent and see if anyone has noticed a similar culture:

I just finished my first semester of BSN nursing school (fundamentals w/ clinical, health assessment, & pharm I) at a private 4-year university. I absolutely love what I am learning and have never been more sure that nursing is my calling.

However, I notice there is a huge culture of fear-mongering among nursing students and professors. Before I actually started the program, students were telling me to be prepared for how hard the classes would be. Even advisors and professors would try to emphasize that nursing school is the hardest thing you would ever do, how it would push you to your limit, how you would have no social life and study all the time, etc. As a pre-nursing student, I was terrified to enter nursing school and what it would hold.

But after a semester...I find that their comments are almost unfounded. The sheer volume of work is a lot but the actual content of what we are learning is--dare I say--easier than my prerequisites. I feel as if nursing students and professors go around saying how hard it is, wearing it as a badge of honor. My friend group feels the same way I do, but among my classmates, all you hear are nursing students complaining about how hard their life is, how nursing school is impossible, how they're being pushed to their limit. I wouldn't say nursing school is "easy" because there is so much time just completing busywork (I.e.- care plans, concept maps) that goes into it...but it certainly isn't rocket science, like there's a reason so many people make it through nursing school vs. how many people make it through medical school. Pharm is the most conceptually heavy and even that just builds off A&P course (my university has very challenging prerequisites so maybe we were just well prepared).

So all of that to say--have any of you experienced a culture of fear-mongering in your nursing school and found it to be completely asinine? I feel as if it's a negative environment that is toxic to morale, and I just don't understand why PROFESSORS continue to propagate it. How do you separate yourself from the negativity? It is hard for someone who is already anxious to hear all this hype that I will be so pushed and so challenged, and having to deal with the constant influx of "LOL yeah good luck" is emotionally draining.

Specializes in Former NP now Internal medicine PGY-3.

People are really good at trying to make it sound like whatever it is their profession is is harder than everything else. I do feel this is more prevalent in nursing though. Probably due to many instructors having an inferiority complex. Nursing school was full of undesirable difficulties (aka stuff that was there just to waste your time). I would say it was not difficult at all content wise.

"Emily-Joy" who became "GratefulHeart365" and is now "Guest1033582" may or may not have left the building.

Specializes in Psychiatry.
On 5/7/2020 at 4:23 AM, Nurse SMS said:

Your personal experience is anecdotal. I will also add that one semester of nursing school does not an expert make.

Agreed. I hope this OP gives us updates as he/she progresses through the upcoming semesters.

Specializes in Neuro.

First semester of nursing school is the easiest part of nursing school. Overall, is there a lot of hype, some over the top, sure, is it all unfounded--no. You may just be fortunate and get it, if that's the case, count yourself very fortunate. But don't just discount others, especially if it's the experience of a majority. People can have very different experiences than yours.

You know what is not hype and not easy? Your first year on the floor as a new nurse.

Specializes in anesthesiology.

I hope someone makes this person cry in clinicals at least once. Is that bad?

Specializes in Community health.

So, your reaction should be relief. “I was so anxious about this! But it turns out I have a knack for these classes and I’m enjoying them.” Okay, good for you. I found nursing school to be easy too. But never once was I contemptuous of the ones who were struggling, or arrogant about the fact that I wasn’t struggling right that second. Life will come at you, it comes at all of us. Be thankful that you’re “breezing” through. I can’t imagine why it would possibly upset you.

Specializes in SRNA.

Yup...sounds about right.

I partied every weekend through my ABSN program. Some days I struggled with studying and actually faced burn out 8 months into the 12 month program.

But it was still easier than my previous degree in Exercise and Health a science.

I think some of it has to do with the types of students attracted to nursing, and the fact that many of their lives are already in full swing. Of course, I went to community college, so I may have seen a lot more swinging than you're seeing.

A lot of people failed out of my program, but what made it so hard for them was trying to balance the demands of school with everything else going on in their lives.

Personally, my electricity and water were frequently shut off for non-payment. I couldn't afford a car, and there were clinical sites that took me THREE HOURS to get to by bus. For someone like me, nursing school was hard before I even stepped into the classroom. And I was not the worst one off, by far.

I do agree with you that the content is not "rocket science".

The only ones in my nursing school classes that I ever remember complaining were the ones who put their nursing school requirements 4th or 5th on the priorities of their life at that time, then would blame it on the school for being too rigid or difficult. But to speak more directly to your post, nursing school students are allowed and told to work within certain parameters, which in and of itself is, or at minimum, can be or is expansive, however due to these limitations, nursing school will be easier for some. For others that prefer to consider more, or even all exhaustive options, to include those not allowed, the limitations can seemingly add to the difficulty level of the nursing school experience, again, due to limits of data being available to the student to analyze. The latter student has no credentials and therefore is not permitted within the system to warrant considering any information outside the predetermined framework of the licensed, professional establishment--and why should they?

Specializes in Cardiology.

My biggest issue was clinicals. They are outdated. There is absolutely no reason why I have to do ginormous care plans since you do not do that at all when you become a nurse. The lab test outs were also ridiculous. What really needs to happen is the older nurses to retire and to get new young blood in there since the world of nursing has changed dramatically since they were a bedside nurse.

41 minutes ago, OUxPhys said:

What really needs to happen is the older nurses to retire and to get new young blood in there since the world of nursing has changed dramatically since they were a bedside nurse.

What an ageist and inflammatory statement! Do you think us "older" nurses stopped our education? I have normally enjoyed your posts but this statement has torpedoed my opinion of you. There are other terms I would rather use but those pesky TOS get in the way. I am stunned and disgusted.

Specializes in Private Duty Pediatrics.
48 minutes ago, OUxPhys said:

My biggest issue was clinicals. They are outdated. There is absolutely no reason why I have to do ginormous care plans since you do not do that at all when you become a nurse.

Those care plans are a teaching tool. While appropriate for students, they are not necessary for an experienced nurse.

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