Gateway Fast Track LPN - after 1 month-my experiences

U.S.A. Arizona

Updated:   Published

This forum has been my primary resource to find answers about what to expect as a new student @ Gateway, and one thing I've noticed is dozens of threads asking about what goes on once you actually begin block 1 - especially in regards to what might be helpful to study before classes start.

I'm sure I'll forget some things, but here's what I've experienced in the first month...

Lectures are once a week, and "labs" are twice a week - this could be because I'm enrolled in a Summer schedule and they needed to get the hours in somewhere. Clinicals for us are 12 hours, on Saturdays, but we've been told that they avoid Saturday placements whenever possible.

Grading - 76% is passing, 75.9% is failing, and they don't do rounding. Attendance - you get to miss ONE lab or clinical per semester. My clinical instructor said if you're really sick, come to clinicals anyway and she'd try to find an "alternate" assignment if at all possible, that didn't involve patient contact.

225 points for quizzes( 9 quizzes total), 75 points for the final. No points for clinical or lab time, it's either pass or fail.

There is a medication math quiz, 10 questions - not part of your grade, but you can't pass meds until you pass the test. At least one clinical instructor has her own test, you must pass both tests to pass meds with her. You get three chances to pass, after you take the quiz twice, our instructor makes you wait and review for a month before your third and final try. Not sure what happens if you fail 3 times - I doubt it's good.

Quiz number one was 15 questions, it was given 2 weeks into class, and covered 13 chapters. Yeah, you read that right - get out your reading glasses. We covered a ton of material very quickly, but it was primarily CNA-type material, and for fast track, you already took a CNA class. Things like vital signs, ROM, Scope of Practice, PPE.

Quiz #2, 25 points - covered 22 chapters (a couple of different books) , and a couple of electronic modules (evolve, EDGT, etc) - The eight "rights of medication" (look up the five rights, then add, - right to refuse, right documentation, and right supplies).

Quiz #3 was 30 points, and ONLY covered 11 chapters... :)... medication/biology, etc...

I'm not trying to scare anyone, this is what I experienced, and FWIW, the quizzes weren't easy, but you aren't likely to fail if you did the reading. My average is currently 85%, and I have no background in healthcare at all.

As you can imagine - they're looking mostly for concepts, not factoids.

Clinicals so far have been a blast for me - I got a great instructor who told us on the first day that we'd walk out of her clinicals with almost every single proceedure on our chart checked off, if they did that proceedure @ this facility, and so far we seem to be on track. I did clinical #2 last week, and so far, I've been checked off on accuchecks, passing meds, wound care, and foleys.

For some instructors you need a care plan every single week, and my instructor said we only need 3 for the semester, but they better not be cut-n-paste plans. They have to be well thought out, specific (customized) to the client, and you need to be able to explain why you're doing what your doing to the instructor. I haven't turned one in yet, and the patient I picked week one went home Saturday, so I get to start over...:crying2:

As for what you'll experience in month 1 - it could be WAAAAY different... I've already experienced some instructors that do a great job of putting you to sleep or confusing you. I hope that isn't who you get, but understand they are out there.

miteacher,

They did not have the online option for us. I didn't take it the first semester. But have taken it this semester and I have found it very helpful in preparing for the exams. We have gone over test taking strategies but we also do NCLEX questions, case studies and prepare for exams. So this semester I have found it helpful. I know in Semester 2, we have people who come in late because that is the earliest they can get there. We are only required to make a total of 3 classes during the semester. I would talk to your instructor, explain the situation and see if they would let you come in late. I have received mix reviews and the review course for semester 1. Some liked it and thought it was helpful and others not so much.

Specializes in ER.
miteacher,

They did not have the online option for us. I didn't take it the first semester. But have taken it this semester and I have found it very helpful in preparing for the exams. We have gone over test taking strategies but we also do NCLEX questions, case studies and prepare for exams. So this semester I have found it helpful. I know in Semester 2, we have people who come in late because that is the earliest they can get there. We are only required to make a total of 3 classes during the semester. I would talk to your instructor, explain the situation and see if they would let you come in late. I have received mix reviews and the review course for semester 1. Some liked it and thought it was helpful and others not so much.

So what books did you find helpful in preparing? I bought the orange Saunders Nclex book and CD and have been doing some of the fundamentals questions.

I used many different NCLEX books....the Saunders' NCLEX PN, Mosby's NCELX PN, Lippincott NCLEX PN...and online you can find a host of free NCLEX questions...just keep doing as many as you can....read the strategies and rationales for each question until you have it down on how should answer that question. Hope that helps.

Specializes in ER.

Any suggestions for the last half of the semester? Or preparing for the final? I had a good average of 84% until I bombed my fluids and electrolytes quiz, and now I'm kind of worried about how the rest of the semester is going to go. What did most people in the class score on the final?

Don't worry about bombing one test here or there....it happens to everyone at one point or the other. Just continue on your path thru the semester except now start adding the stuff you have already tested on and start reviewing it to prepare for the final. It's better to keep reviewing it through-out the semester then to try and cram right before the final. Keep doing the NCLEX questions on your current studies and the past review. It should set you up for the final nicely. I believe they said the average number of questions missed on the final was 7. It sounds like you have a good strong grade....don't let one bad test defeat you. Good luck!

Specializes in ER.
Don't worry about bombing one test here or there....it happens to everyone at one point or the other. Just continue on your path thru the semester except now start adding the stuff you have already tested on and start reviewing it to prepare for the final. It's better to keep reviewing it through-out the semester then to try and cram right before the final. Keep doing the NCLEX questions on your current studies and the past review. It should set you up for the final nicely. I believe they said the average number of questions missed on the final was 7. It sounds like you have a good strong grade....don't let one bad test defeat you. Good luck!

Wow, only missing 7 is great! I had heard that many had failed the class because they completely bombed the final. Thanks for the tips. I really want to make sure I don't forget everything we have covered so far! There is so much material, and anything is fair game for the final! I noticed that there is one day on the syllabus left to review for the final. Did you find that helpful? Do you have any other tips?

For the final I reviewed all my handouts and NCLEX questions. If there was something I didn't know, I went back to the book and reviewed it. If you keep reviewing the handouts from class and do at least 50 NCLEX questions per night, you will be prepared. I honestly did more then 50 questions per night, but some don't have time to do more than that. Make sure you understand the strategies and rationales of the NCLEX question as well....once you understand those...you can pretty much answer any NCLEX question. GOOD LUCK, you will do great!

Specializes in ER.

How is block 2 different than block 1? What did you think about the block 2 instructors?

What was the process like starting after you received a placement email?

Thanks for sharing your experience. What does your schedule look like for the classes, and are there any other options ? I work nights as a CNA during the week and have my kids 3 days a week . So i would like to have a better understanding of what to expect so i can adjust accordingly,

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