help me buck the system, please! super-traditional pinning ceremony that nobody wants

Nurses General Nursing

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Hi all-

I'm posting this in the general discussion rather than the student discussion, as I want to hear from people who were successful in doing something like this.

I'm the president of my ADN class, graduating this May. We have 17 students, 14 of them women. Our faculty is, almost entirely, *extremely* conservative, and the school is in a very small town. Our pinning ceremony is held in a church, and has pretty significant christian religious overtones, which I have a problem with; I think it's an inappropriate blurring of the line between church and state (this is a state-funded community college), and I've had a few students express discomfort with having the ceremony in this church. By the way- it's only held there for faculty preference; there's plenty of room on campus.

My main concern, though, is the attire for the ceremony. We're being forced to wear white dresses and caps. Now, we have to wear the caps in most clinical rotations, which is enough of an indignity (people think we're kidding, that other staff members are playing practical jokes on them by sending students in the room with caps on...it's nauseating, but I've tried to change this with no success). But I think it's ludicrous to insist we wear them at the pinning ceremony. It's *our* event, not the faculty's. In my opinion, the requirement that women wear dresses is inappropriately sexist, and from a logistical standpoint, *nobody* should be spending money on a white dress that will gather dust forever, when we have the expense of the NCLEX looming in our immediate future.

We have one student who wants to wear a white dress, and the others are adamantly opposed to it. I'm looking for ways to approach the program director with alternatives...I think that I need to have some suggestions, or he's just going to shut it down completely. Personally, this issue is important enough to me that I won't attend the ceremony if we have to wear the dresses. I know of at least 2 other women who plan to do the same thing.

My current plan is to have a meeting with the director and my vice-president to discuss the feelings our class has about the issue, and suggest a couple of alternatives- wearing nice, 'dressy' outfits, or wearing our clinical uniform (white smock and lab coat with navy pants). I'd like to hear from anyone else who had to address this issue, and how you resolved it. I'm also open to any suggestions *anyone* has...this director is extremely old-fashioned (he said he'd have us all wearing black stockings and orthopedic shoes, if he had his way), but he also respects me *specifically* because I'm confident and outspoken. By the way, if this were not the prevailing feeling of the other class members, I'd just skip the ceremony...I'm treating it like a class issue because I feel that's my role as the class president.

Also, please don't try to convince me we should be wearing the dresses. I don't really give a hoot about someone else's traditions that encourage disrespect and sexism, so the 'traditional' nurse's uniform is something I refuse to ever put on my body. I find the caps degrading enough...I am a medical professional in training, and there's nothing more irritating than having a doctor or nurse or patient say, 'how *cute*!!' when I walk into a room. If you disagree with me, I certainly respect your opinion, but I am absolutely certain of my position on this subject.

I think Rachel sounds pretty level headed actually. After all, she's endured 2 years of wearing those totally ridiculous caps! I appauded her for that!!! These gals look pretty happy, though!

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Here're some graduates from the late 1800's :)

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The pictures were great!!

The first one brought flashbacks to my LPN graduation. In Alberta, our caps had the dusty rose ribbons to signify we were trained in Alberta (wildrose country). I've heard LPN's trained in Ontario had aquamarine ribbons.

Anybody got more info on that.

Nora Spencer Hamner, born in 1890 in Albemarle County, Virginia was a honor graduate of MCV School of Nursing in 1914. Shortly thereafter, she became a public health nurse in Darlington, South Carolina and after serving there she returned to Virginia to be a field nurse for forty-seven southwest counties. In 1919 she moved to Richmond and became executive secretary of the Richmond Tuberculosis Association a post she held for forty-three years until her retirement in1962. She was the first public health nurse in Virginia to complete a Master of Science degree, and she devoted her life to the welfare of MCV. She was the first woman to be appointed to the MCV Board of Visitors. Later, she served on the Board of Trustees of the MCV Foundation and was active until her death on November 17, 1971.

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Class of 1903, Marquette University!!!

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Quite a woman, Florence Nightingale!!!

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Specializes in everywhere.

Our class raised our own money for our pinning ceremony. The pinning meant more to me than the graduation since only the graduating nurses were honored at the pinning. We had our ceremony at the college, our instructors were there for presenting the awards and such. Family members were able to present us with our pins. The graduation ceremony was nice, it included all the graduates. I probably won't ever wear my pin, but it is nice to have. Yes, we had to buy our pins ourselves, but I was worth it to me. I worked hard for that pin and those awards.

The only stipulation that our instructors had was on the dress code, we wore white scrubs, they had to be bright white, cleaned, and pressed. Everyone (including the bigger people) looked very nice and professional.

We did not say an oath. White gowns are not an honor to me by any stretch of the imagination.......

Oh yes there were 250 in my graduating class.

Sorry my practice is honor not my clothes

JMHO

renerian

"We care about our patients, for whom we had sworn to care, protect and heal. It is our duty as professionals....We rejoice with them when a baby is born; we cry with their loved ones when death takes them away. We take pride in our contribution to their healing that brings them home from surgery. We hide our tears when we know that saying good-bye to one may be our last time. We put on a brave front when life is hanging in the balance. We valiantly fight to advocate for our patients' rights to the best care, or even to die with dignity.

I beleive this is the one we said I had to look online but this is pretty close if not it.

and we closed with

Nurses Prayer

As I care for my patients today

Be there with me, Oh Lord, I pray.

Make my words kind - it means so much.

And in my hands place your healing touch.

Let your love shine through all that I do,

So those in need may hear and feel You.

Specializes in Critical Care/ICU.

you know, change to reflect the way things are while still respecting tradition is a good thing for nurses.

when we read the nurse's pledge during our pinning ceremony, we recited an updated version.

i dug out my program and found it. here's what we said:

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i solemnly pledge myself in the presence of this assembly to practice my profession with integrity, honesty, and commitment.

i will contribute to the betterment of my profession by working to elevate the standards of nursing care, by adding to nursing's body of knowledge, and by delivering person-centered care.

i will care for individuals, families, and groups with respect, advocating for them and maintaining their confidentiality. i will refrain from administering treatments which will cause harm.

through collaroration, inquiry, and pursuit of wisdom, i will endeavor to safeguard the health and welfare of those committed to my care.

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i think the pledge we read is much better suited to nursing as it is now than the original pledge:

i solemnly pledge myself before god and in the presence of this assembly, to pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully. i will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous, and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug. i will do all in my power to maintain and elevate the standard of my profession, and will hold in confidence all personal matters committed to my keeping and all family affairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my calling. with loyalty will i endeavor to aid the physician in his work, and devote myself to the welfare of those committed to my care.

the pledge we read purposely omitted parts such as pledging before "god," and referring to "purity," "deleterious" or "mischievous" behavior," "my calling," and the "aiding the physician in his work" part.

aside from the "pledging to god" part, the other omitted parts are stereotypes and misconceptions of and about nurses and what we do. the "pledging to god" part was omitted to reflect the diverse cultural and religious make-up of nursing students and nurses. leaving out the "my calling" part helps in recognizing that nursing is a profession of choice and not something that someone is born into.

many schools have changed the pledge to reflect current day nursing practice:

http://www.nurseweek.com/news/features/01-10/nightingale.html

anyway, i don't think florence nightingale would be too upset with the changes:

http://www.care-nurse.com/creeds/nightengale.html

anyway....

The person who made the statement that 'big girls look better in a dress' needs to be reported

if none of the students want to have a pinning then simply do not go...have a get-together at a pizza place or stay at home...

if you want a pinning but do not want the one that is planned do as has been suggested and make a presentation to the powers that be

as for being outspoken i think the op is just patting herself on the back...i don't believe that quiet thinking people are 'pushovers'

when i was a child we had this one bantam rooster who would get up to the top of the barn to crow...

Are male nurses expected to wear white caps?

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