First day of nursing School *unleashed* post yours

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Well, I would like to share my first day of nursing school experience.

It all started last night when i could not go to sleep, then I woke up at 4 am, because I was so excited and anxiety had taken over! Well I got up, took a shower, took care of the dogs, and even ironed my uniform.

I ended up leaving home at 6 am, for the 1 hour commute, since I was afraid that I would be caught in the middle of traffic.

I ended up at school at 7 am, I sat in my car, had my coffee, and at 730 people started showing up. Well I found out that classes would not start until 9 on the first day, since they had people lost on the buildings, trying to find the classrooms, teachers coming back gathering loads of stuff, from a side to another, and finally classes started. It was funny to see all my peeps from pre-reqs there in addition to some other new faces!

It all started by our Pharmacology teacher (we have pharm all day long on Mondays) asking us to write a paragraph on:

- Why nursing?

- Semester goal

- 3 year goal

After we wrote that, she made us one by one, read it to the class, as an introduction! Well, I heard maybe half of the people with the CRNA goal, the other half with money/or NP goal, LOL hopefully they'll get there!

Then she started the syllabus, in which:

  • 50% are tests
  • 10% presentation
  • 10% group work, participation
  • 5% post test
  • 25% finals.

Which is not bad. My first impression is that Our teacher is a nice Lady, she has been a NP for 12 years, and on still works 2 days a week on her private practice, which I thought was a plus, since she is updated on things.

Well, then lecture started, and we went over the nursing process, and then the 7 rights, and then we covered chapters 1 and 2 of the book (keep in mind 5 hour lecture LOL) the funny thing is: We have to know chapters 1-9 by next Monday!!! For our first test, she will give us multiple choices only, and will allow us to use a 4X6 flashcard, where we can write stuff on one side, and hand it to her, then she will return it to us on the first test day, keep in mind that we have 5 tests. OMG that is a lot of info, even though I had answered the questions already on the study guide...

She is really nice to us, always asking if it is all clear, anymore questions! I like her I guess! (Although you know... some people on the break room already started venting... blah)

Then she was telling us that we will have clinicals starting on the end of the month, so we can learn how to talk to our patients, practice some basic skills. (For the first 3 weeks we have Thursday and Fridays just for skills!!! 10 hours a week!).

She said that we will not do any invasive skill on ourselves, meaning no drawing each others blood, or giving any sort of injection. How the hell am I going to learn??? How did you guys learn this??? It makes me wonder, since I have no previous experience with that other than a few lovenox abdominal shots.

She said that in May we will start giving IM, IV, Sq, and all that good stuff. (But then again with no previous human attempts! She said that if we were to do it among ourselves, somewhere else... Whatever! But not in class!)

So it was exciting today, lots of information, and homework! Can't wait for tomorrow (but I am ok, anxiety level is down now).

We have fundamentals ALLLLLL day tomorrow, starting at 8-2pm

So, bottom line, so far I am very happy with everything, the nursing staff seems amazing so far (have dealt with them since pre-reqs) and all my classmates are cool (of course, there is the sleepy one, the parrot one, the repetitive one, the fancy girls, the CNA knows it all's, but they are ok so far!)

Comments are welcome!

Those who start(started) soon please post your experience here! Lets make this thread last all the way through our graduation!!!

Specializes in Telemetry and Psych.

Thank you to the OP who started this thread!

I just finished reading through everyone's posts and am now really excited and NERVOUS!! lol. I have been FINALLY accepted into the nursing program starting in August 2010.

Like a previous student stated, i will be a newbie on the campus that I have been accepted to for the nursing program. I'm hoping that I may run into previous classmates but more than likely won't. Especially where i currently live versus where the school will be where i am going.

The commute will hopefully not be too bad. I'm estimating it to be 30-45 minutes from home. So i'm sure i'll be at school early just to know that I'm there and ready...lol.

What's posted on the nursing website for orientation, is Aug 17th. It seems SOOO FAR AWAY!! A part of me wants it to hurry up and get here and another part...i'm ok with waiting. (Lets me get my fun reading done..lol..oh those paranormal, romance novels! lol...i have about 34 of them sitting on my bookshelf needing to be read!)

This thread has given me a great sense of what I should be expecting the first day of class and what to possibly starting reading up on before then.

Thank you again for putting this here!!

Thank you to the OP who started this thread!

I just finished reading through everyone's posts and am now really excited and NERVOUS!! lol. I have been FINALLY accepted into the nursing program starting in August 2010.

Like a previous student stated, i will be a newbie on the campus that I have been accepted to for the nursing program. I'm hoping that I may run into previous classmates but more than likely won't. Especially where i currently live versus where the school will be where i am going.

The commute will hopefully not be too bad. I'm estimating it to be 30-45 minutes from home. So i'm sure i'll be at school early just to know that I'm there and ready...lol.

What's posted on the nursing website for orientation, is Aug 17th. It seems SOOO FAR AWAY!! A part of me wants it to hurry up and get here and another part...i'm ok with waiting. (Lets me get my fun reading done..lol..oh those paranormal, romance novels! lol...i have about 34 of them sitting on my bookshelf needing to be read!)

This thread has given me a great sense of what I should be expecting the first day of class and what to possibly starting reading up on before then.

Thank you again for putting this here!!

lol my nursing orientation is on Sept 1st. LOL a whole 5 months away :crying2:

What a good thread! It gives me an idea of what to expect come August (hopefully) :) Thanks for all your stories and I will definitely be sharing mine when the time comes :specs:

Bumping this back up to the top since it was such a GREAT thread to read. I'll be adding mine on Sept 7th, which is actually my first nursing lab so I'm sure it'll be very interesting!

I will be starting Med-Surg on Monday May 24th, I am so excited, but at the same time im very scared. I have heard a lot of horror stories for med-surg, but i am going to go in with a positive attitude. If anyone here has been in med-surg could you offer some advice or tips to make it through this class. Good Luck to everyone.

Specializes in Critical Care, Emergency Medicine, Flight.

my first day is may 25th...im sooo excited :D

Specializes in Telemetry and Psych.
i will be starting med-surg on monday may 24th, i am so excited, but at the same time im very scared. i have heard a lot of horror stories for med-surg, but i am going to go in with a positive attitude. if anyone here has been in med-surg could you offer some advice or tips to make it through this class. good luck to everyone.

my first day is may 25th...im sooo excited :D

2bnurseforce1 and pneumothorax...

good luck next week!!

count down for me....3 months....lol...exactly! (at least for orientation that is..)

Ok so I started Med-Surg today and let me tell you, I am already feel a little intimidated. I think I am starting to have panic attacks. :uhoh3: There is a lot of information that this course covers. Fluid & Electrolytes alone is like another class to me.:eek: I think I will do fine, I just have to break the information down one by one. Good luck to everyone and If anybody has any tips for Med-Surg please be sure to share.

Specializes in Acute Rehab.

Hey nursing students and future nursing students :D

I just wanted to congratulate all of you and let you know that time will fly when you start the program. I posted at the beginning of this post tpost number 14) and now I'm starting my last semester of nursing in August! So hold on to your seats...the time will fly and you'll be taking your nclex before you know it!

Good luck everyone :)

I don't know what post on this thread is my original, but I just graduated May 8th! I am now in the throws of "anxiety related to preparation for NCLEX AEB moments of wondering if I really learned enough in school to do this!" LOL, no I will be fine I just have to keep doing NCLEX questions and researching areas I am weak in...so far it's meds! Relating to the question about tips for Med/Surg just get your med classes straight, action and side effects, and learn the disease process for the body systems...what should concern you as the nurse? What is a normal picture of a patient with this disease? Start using your critical thinking skills for these diseases...what can you do as a nurse to help with signs and symptoms? Should you call the Dr? If you should, what info should you have to give him about the patient? Hope this helps

Specializes in Acute Rehab.

Omg the dreaded NCLEX! Good luck to you beth66335.I'm studying this whole summer for it so hopefully I'll have a leg up on studying in december. Congrats on finishing :D

I am a new nurse...I graduated 12/2009 and I passed the NCLEX in March of this year. Last week I started orientation for my new job. I was hired at a PICU in a very busy county hospital...I am very nervous...maybe even more than my first day of nursing school.

My first day of nursing school wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. My first theory test was harder than expected; it takes time to start thinking like a nurse. It seemed like every other questions involved knowing the rationale to interventions. My brain was trained to memorize answers and recall facts and I quickly realized that my study habits needed to change. The theory doesn't get easier. My advice is to take really good notes in class and study everyday...even if you only study for an hour. I highly recommend that when you study you learn the diseases using the nursing process ie... asessment=know abnormal physical findings, labs, diagnositic studies, etc, diagnosis=Ineffective breathing pattern (if there is more than one always prioritize using Maslow's Hierachy), planning= your gamplan, interventions= nursing and collaborative, evaluation= were your interventions effective? I used this study method and it worked well for me.

I think clinical were the toughest part of nursing school. Some instructors want to be very involved and want to be with you for any procedure. Other instructors give more freedom and let you handle patient on your own. My best advice during clinicals is to be outgoing and if you have the opportunity to perform a procedure...do it. The nursing staff and the instructors know we are students and are learning. Make the most out of each clinical day and perfect your skills and learn new ones. If you don't know something write it down and look it up after clinicals...that is an excellent way of learning. It's normal to be nervous, it's normal to have shaky hands with your first injection or iv start.

Nursing school is hard and there will be days when you want to drop out. I think most of us had the same feelings during nursing school. It doesn't matter if it's your first semester or your last the butterflies in your stomach feeling before clinicals will be there.

I wish the best for everyone starting nursing school. It is hard but not impossible!

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