I HATE nursing school. Now what?

Nursing Students General Students Nursing Q/A

I am in my third semester of nursing school and, if I make it through this semester, I will only have one more to go until graduation. But, I HATE nursing school. I keep reading that being a nurse is not like nursing school and I leave my clinicals feeling intrigued, interested, challenged, and excited for being a nurse. Mainly, my issues are with how it is structured and how I simultaneously feel pressure to ask a million questions and shamed by/ hostility from professors for asking ¨stupid questions.¨

My school requires a 75 or higher to be considered passing in a class. If you do not get that, you fail the whole semester and have to repeat the class you failed with a 75 or higher before you can move on to the next semester. It also has a zero tolerance policy for late work (very understandable), drilled into us in the first and second semester about all of the things that would get us kicked out of the program (also important to know... but there are better ways to go about it), and expects us to always be prepared (also very understandable), and how they have the right to change our schedules (due dates etc) at any time for any reason. However, the professors are often unprepared, do not understand the instructions for their own assignments, give vague/ unclear directions with information that is half correct, often seem like they don´t really know what is going on, and/ or get defensive/ hostile/annoyed/ look at you like you are an idiot when you ask specific questions to clarify (because whether they told you or made it clear or not you are accountable for it... that is why I ask a lot of questions).

Also, and I am not trying to imply that class should be entertainment, but where is the sense of humor? Where is the attempt to make learning fun/inspiring/ even remotely engaging? I know we are going into a profession that requires a very high degree of professional communication, but we are all human and the medical field deals with life and death and uncomfortable situations on a daily basis... you have to laugh, or you´ll pull your hair out from stress, cry your eyes out, and/or get burned out. Further, all that therapeutic communication stuff that we have been learning about since first semester? Definitely not practiced in the academic setting. Basically, it just feels like there is perpetual disorganization, lack of respect for our time, dual standards of expectations, and zero sense of humor. And I am finding myself angry, already burnt out, frustrated, and perpetually exasperated.

Additionally (I swear I am almost done), I am in OB this semester. I am a female in my early 30´s, married, no kids, don´t want kids, think birth and pregnancy are gross, and find that people are continually trying to explain things in terms of what you do with your own kids/ with your own pregnancy. Also, for the ones who don´t have kids yet that are either younger or male, there is a definite assumption that they will and, I am quoting my professor here, ¨you should learn it now, so you know when you go through it.¨ What about those who have tried and are unable? What about those who are like me? Screw you for implying that I am less capable/less something because I don´t have kids and don´t want them (this has also happened a couple of times in clinicals and a few times in other classes... it is never overt, but the implications are clear).

So, what now? I am seriously considering quitting, but, as I and my husband have sunk a considerable amount into this already, I need to be 100% sure and have a plan of action before I bring it up with him. I decided to go into nursing school to make a career change from working in various roles in retail and food service and to join a career path that can actually make a difference for the better in the lives of others while still being able to pay the bills. I have a bachelor´s degree, but the degree is basically useless (it was a build your own major with an emphasis on English and creative writing, but I did a lot of work in Sociology and Biology... I took the long way around to graduate). I am very afraid that I have made a horrible, expensive life mistake.

The burn out factor is very real.

It just sounds like you sadly got threw into a non compassionate program, keep a journal with all of your feelings so that you can look back on them once you get settled into your new career.

Keep your head up, and don't forget why you started. You're almost at the finish line, you got this!

Specializes in Medsurg.

Girl bye. Have a seat. Several. You know how many people don't get to the level your at? Your smart. Go get your RN

Thank you to all who have replied. You all are right... I need to suck it up, graduate, and get my RN. It has been very reassuring to read the input everyone has offered... this past month has been brutal. So, again, THANK YOU for the support. I can do this.

On 9/7/2019 at 8:04 AM, namaB said:

I am in my third semester of nursing school and, if I make it through this semester, I will only have one more to go until graduation. But, I HATE nursing school. I keep reading that being a nurse is not like nursing school and I leave my clinicals feeling intrigued, interested, challenged, and excited for being a nurse. Mainly, my issues are with how it is structured and how I simultaneously feel pressure to ask a million questions and shamed by/ hostility from professors for asking ¨stupid questions.¨

My school requires a 75 or higher to be considered passing in a class. If you do not get that, you fail the whole semester and have to repeat the class you failed with a 75 or higher before you can move on to the next semester. It also has a zero tolerance policy for late work (very understandable), drilled into us in the first and second semester about all of the things that would get us kicked out of the program (also important to know... but there are better ways to go about it), and expects us to always be prepared (also very understandable), and how they have the right to change our schedules (due dates etc) at any time for any reason. However, the professors are often unprepared, do not understand the instructions for their own assignments, give vague/ unclear directions with information that is half correct, often seem like they don´t really know what is going on, and/ or get defensive/ hostile/annoyed/ look at you like you are an idiot when you ask specific questions to clarify (because whether they told you or made it clear or not you are accountable for it... that is why I ask a lot of questions).

Also, and I am not trying to imply that class should be entertainment, but where is the sense of humor? Where is the attempt to make learning fun/inspiring/ even remotely engaging? I know we are going into a profession that requires a very high degree of professional communication, but we are all human and the medical field deals with life and death and uncomfortable situations on a daily basis... you have to laugh, or you´ll pull your hair out from stress, cry your eyes out, and/or get burned out. Further, all that therapeutic communication stuff that we have been learning about since first semester? Definitely not practiced in the academic setting. Basically, it just feels like there is perpetual disorganization, lack of respect for our time, dual standards of expectations, and zero sense of humor. And I am finding myself angry, already burnt out, frustrated, and perpetually exasperated.

Additionally (I swear I am almost done), I am in OB this semester. I am a female in my early 30´s, married, no kids, don´t want kids, think birth and pregnancy are gross, and find that people are continually trying to explain things in terms of what you do with your own kids/ with your own pregnancy. Also, for the ones who don´t have kids yet that are either younger or male, there is a definite assumption that they will and, I am quoting my professor here, ¨you should learn it now, so you know when you go through it.¨ What about those who have tried and are unable? What about those who are like me? Screw you for implying that I am less capable/less something because I don´t have kids and don´t want them (this has also happened a couple of times in clinicals and a few times in other classes... it is never overt, but the implications are clear).

So, what now? I am seriously considering quitting, but, as I and my husband have sunk a considerable amount into this already, I need to be 100% sure and have a plan of action before I bring it up with him. I decided to go into nursing school to make a career change from working in various roles in retail and food service and to join a career path that can actually make a difference for the better in the lives of others while still being able to pay the bills. I have a bachelor´s degree, but the degree is basically useless (it was a build your own major with an emphasis on English and creative writing, but I did a lot of work in Sociology and Biology... I took the long way around to graduate). I am very afraid that I have made a horrible, expensive life mistake.

You made it that far. Don't focus on something that you dislike or hate.

You are great student and it is school makes you to forget why you decide to become a nurse . Few more months until grad you can do it

I'm in my first semester and LOVE it. However, my instructors are fairly amazing and competent. Yours don't sound as much. Keep in mind that these people are professionally trained nurses not educators (some are professionally trained educators but the majority have advanced degrees in areas other than education). I understand it's not at all like what nursing will be but I am one of those people who just likes school & studying. Is it possible that you hate the STRESS of nursing school? Maybe you hate having to "do things" as I say (papers, projects, etc.). Even I get annoyed with all of the 1000s of things we have to do in nursing school. It's a never-ending barrage of responsibility.

Definitely 100% do NOT quit something you are 75% done with. Once you finish you have a world of opportunity to look forward to. If you quit now, you have a lot of wasted time & money on your hands.

Seems you have the makings of a great teacher! You already know the motivations required to make learning into a personal experience.

@namaB You sound like you will make a great future RN. I am sorry about your experience thus far in your program. Unfortunately there are nursing schools, instructors, preceptors, even future co-workers who can ruin what truly nursing is and should be. I recently got accepted into an RN program and heard great things about my school, but because of your post and what others have said here, I will be sure to keep an open mind and have positive attitude that the end goal is to be an RN, in my own terms. Love the community here at Allnurses.

Hey all, a little update: I made it through nursing school, passed my NCLEX, and start a GN residency in January! Thanks again for the support when I was down, I am glad I stuck it out.

I’m two weeks into my first semester and I hate it. I can’t believe how badly I misjudged this. I don’t want to be a nurse. 

Specializes in RN.

Are you me? 

Seriously, I came across this while searching on Google and just had to make an account to reply. I feel the EXACT SAME. 

My previous degree was in STEM (and a minor in business) and I find it increasingly difficult to get myself through this program. I'm in the accelerated program and it is VERY apparent that almost all of the professors have less education than most of the class. I resonate SO MUCH with everything you have said and it has made me question the profession MULTIPLE times. I also find the general personalities in this program (lots of good ones too) insufferable, as they are highly opinionated, political and judgmental. Many also slight other healthcare professions and they have NO IDEA the difference in education levels when some of them think a nurse or NP is "more knowledgeable" than a doctor. I have a friend that went RN-> medical school and she is AMAZINGLY SMART, but nursing school and years of nursing DID NOT prepare her even a little for the sheer volume of studying (16+ hours of studying daily). It infuriates me that I see and experience snide comments about doctors, particularly. This PARTICULARLY shouldn't be happening in school. School should be facilitating team work and respect. 

 I feel cheated and lied too about what this degree involved. I understand many would have gone through the 4 year BSN from high school, but I never noticed how big of a difference STEM was from nursing nor the personality differences...nursing almost feels like an extension of high school rather than higher learning. The nursing education feels like pseudo-science in school, most of the time, and it drives me crazy. In class, we are forced to have opinions on political matters, which I feel largely unprofessional in real practice. The majority of our education also consists of group projects and essays on political topics or our "feelings". OR 'empathy training' to which I'm going to say you can't train based on a large body of psychology research. Empathy is part experience and part personality. I do enjoy the actual skills, but most of the "education" is outdated or not thoroughly researched to begin with and I find myself becoming more bitter about the profession as time goes on. I went through being stressed and challenged to being increasingly depressed and anxious due to the inorganization of this program and lack of objectivity. I feel like an outsider looking in. At this point, I can't drop out. At least having a RN license will make me eligible for other jobs, but is it ever HARD to get through this mentally. 

I really don't have an answer. I'm planning to get a more specialized position and I hope it will be more objective than general nursing. If that doesn't work out, the union apparently pays for further education, so I will do whatever it takes to get myself in another position.

Specializes in oncology.
Neopint15 said:

. I'm in the accelerated program and it is VERY apparent that almost all of the professors have less education than most of the class.

Neopint15,

Can you explain this? Aren't you in a university setting?

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