Number One Pet Peeve in Nursing School: Future "Paycheck Nurses"

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Okay so heads up: this may or may not be a rant.

I'm in my 4th semester of nursing school and have one more to go (graduating in August!!) and I truly have a deep passion for nursing and I am very excited to get out into the field.

However...

I am SO tired of the future "paycheck nurses" in my class. Just to clarify (and this is from an instructor not me) a paycheck nurse is a nurse who really has little to no interest in the field of nursing outside of the job security and pay. You know the kind, probably older, probably doing nursing as a second career, or younger and still thinking "I don't know what I wanna be when I grow up but nurses are paid pretty well so here we go!". My class is pretty large (started around 150 people, now down to about 80) and a good few of the people who just wanted the good pay and a "guaranteed" job were weeded out pretty quickly (usually shortly after they realized nursing school required effort) but unfortunately there are still a few left.

It just really grinds on my nerves when I see them passing (barely passing, more often than not) while people who truly want to be nurses, who would be great nurses, fail. These paycheck nurses in training are pretty open about why they're in nursing school (they're nothing if not honest), but they're negative attitudes in class and clinical is getting pretty old pretty quick.

In class they're the ones on their phones the whole time checking facebook or whatever, and when they do decide to tune in to the lecture they ask questions the instructor just answered and waste everyone's time (thankfully the instructors are starting to call them out on it but still). They're the ones bragging about having not even bought the book or taken it out of the plastic wrapping, but not bragging about their grades. In my school, after the first two semesters attendance isn't mandatory (lectures/powerpoints are recorded and posted online) and you can go hybrid and only come to class for tests, and they tend to be the ones who only come for tests.

In clinical they like to hide, doing the bare minimum patient care and avoiding anything they don't want to do (answering call bells, giving baths, assisting pts to the bathroom, skills, etc.) and when asked to do these things by the clinical instructor they roll their eyes and whine about it the rest of the day. If a fellow student asks for help they look at them like their stupid and spout little gems like "Ew gross, no." or "That's CNA ****" or my personal favorite "I'm an RN student so go find an LPN or CNA or something."

NOTE: Our school really emphasizes, and I firmly believe, that nothing is beneath us at clinical; if someone asks for/needs help then we should help them.

I know the news and everyone likes to talk about nursing be the land of milk and honey, and that kind of representation attracts this kind of person but I can't help but think that if paralegals or electronics technicians or some other associate degree accessible career were paid more than nurses then these people would be sitting in legal or electronics classes instead of medsurg ones.

ALSO: I don't mean to say that every second career nursing student, or older nursing student, or anyone is automatically a paycheck nurse in training. I have several friends that are older/second career who are in nursing school because they want to be nurses, and they are just now having the chance to pursue their dream for whatever reason. I have nothing for respect for anyone going through nursing school for the right reasons, but I have a hard time respecting those who don't respect the profession enough to treat it as anything other than a meal ticket.

Specializes in NICU.

Joshmiller, it mostly sounds like you dislike students with bad attitudes, as opposed to paycheck nurses. I totally agree. But as others have said, passion and loving what you do don't necessarily pay the mortgage. If they aren't weeded out by hard work and tests, then they've earned their spot, attitude and all. Just try to ignore it and be the professional one. I'm sure you've heard that you will have to work with nurses of all personalities.

Specializes in Pediatrics.

Frankly, as a current "paycheck nurse," my motivations are my business. Oftentimes, I feel like not having a "calling" works to my advantage. I've seen sweet, tender-hearted nurse after nurse turn down some of the most depressing pediatric private-duty patients because it was too much for them to take. My main patient now? A beautiful little baby whose situation proved too emotional for other nurses.

P.S. When you're standing in front of a patient holding a supposity, they probably don't care if you came into the profession by way of spiritual awakening or a desire for financial stability.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
we are all people person and love nursing..
I am not a 'people person,' nor do I love nursing. I have an introverted personality and constant interaction with people drains my energy.

I am a nurse for very practical reasons: easy entry, flexible scheduling, steady middle income, work/life balance, and opportunities for growth. Since employment takes up too much of my personal time, I will never love any job (nursing or non-nursing). However, I work to stay afloat and I generally have a good attitude while I am at the workplace.

Yes, I am very much a paycheck nurse. No way in heck would I do this job for free. However, I have a thirst for lifelong learning and a curiosity that keeps me striving for more than mediocrity.

Specializes in Emergency/Cath Lab.

Im a paycheck nurse but I was in charge of my education because I realized lives are at my hand. But hey, what do I know, I just like the money.

Specializes in critical care.

OP, a plea.... Please don't make the mistake of confusing "paycheck nurses" with laziness.

Disclaimer: I've only gotten through page one on this thread.

My nursing school pet peeves? Instructors who don't fully read what they're grading, and lack of consistency on number of assignments and due dates for clinicals. Or, those instructors who make a giant stink about getting fast turnaround time from us, but then either take a week to respond to emails, or return assignments literally a month and a half later. Respect my time as much as you expect me to respect yours, please!

I've been lucky enough to only deal with one lazy student. We had a group project and she contributed next to nothing. I realized quite by accident that the little bit she DID do, she plagiarized. I only discovered that by googling the right thing in the eleventh hour to be sure we had everything we needed. Then she had the nerve to ask me why I scored her less than perfectly in our group evaluations.

I've had two clinical instructors that I'm fairly certain struggled to separate personal feelings from professional obligations. That's a toughie. How do you go above an instructor's head for that without sounding like YOU are the one who can't separate personal from professional? Ultimately, I'm glad for anonymous evaluations at the end of the semester.

I think the way content is presented could be better. Also, if I were to restructure things myself, I would have lecture first year, lab experiences and clinicals second year. I feel like I, personally, would have a better time digesting and retaining information if it were split up this way.

I think that's all I have on my nursing school pet peeves. I haven't read past page one yet, so if this post is severely misplaced after there has been discussion for a few pages, my apologies!

Specializes in critical care.
You'll find that us "paycheck nurses" are still working long after the "It's my dream" nurses crash and burn.

I'm terrified of this. I mean really, really afraid. I'm one of those "this is my calling" ones, who also sees the value in the paycheck. So I guess I'm kind of in the middle, because I could have gone back to my former career and teaching childbirth classes on the side, but I want to do more and I do think nursing can be lucrative.

I have an overwhelming amount of passion and I do have a history of burning out when I go "at it" too strong for too long. I've already decided there is no way I can do psych nursing because knowing in the long run, there will never be resources enough to truly help people will make me lose it completely. I'm in love with women's health and peds, and I can a potential for burnout there, but there are more resources there. I think my stamina will be better.

I'm just going to have to make sure I always use my vacation time, I remember to stay fully invested in my personal life, and I pull away from emotionally heavy situations. I actually think in terms of burnout, the "paycheck nurses" do have an advantage here.

Specializes in NICU.

lol @ "paycheck nurses"...I honestly find this to be funny as I don't think anyone really would go through nursing school solely for a check..taking out loans in order to go to school..I honestly feel that nurses are underpaid..it really isn't worth the amount of work they have to do and time they have to put in..like you said there are many other different career paths they could have chosen so it must have been something additional that made them stick it through..

though i am a second career nursing student, i can empathize. i too expected this profession to be full of saints and angels. you're going to encounter some fudged up people in life; the hospital, nursing school, etc... is no different. some of your coworkers will share the same ideals, beliefs, etc... as you.

i wouldn't lose sleep over it. and if you can't beat em, join em.

You continue to become the best RN that you can be. The people who only skim by, it will show in due time!

Specializes in CVICU.
though i am a second career nursing student, i can empathize. i too expected this profession to be full of saints and angels.

Sorry, but how old are you? Nurses are people too, and people come in a wide, wide variety of flavors. To expect a field with over 2million professionals in the country to be full of 'saints and angels' is incredibly naive.

though i am a second career nursing student, i can empathize. i too expected this profession to be full of saints and angels. you're going to encounter some fudged up people in life; the hospital, nursing school, etc... is no different. some of your coworkers will share the same ideals, beliefs, etc... as you.

i wouldn't lose sleep over it. and if you can't beat em, join em.

Is this real life?!

Specializes in Med surge, ob,pediatrics,GYN,dialysis,ER.

Some advice from an LpN for 6 years turned RN, lots if things will bother you in the field. Focus on your behavior and business, no one else's. Attrition will take care of the rest

Most of us still want to save the world one person at a time.

Take all that time and energy, focus in you, and stay out of gossip. Mouth closed, eArs open. I mean this sincerely and with due respect.

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