Nurse Educator Chronicles: Gladys

Gladys* was a senior nursing student, in her fourth semester (out of five) in the rough and tough ADN program. She was very insecure and it showed in her demeanor. She had self-esteem issues and sometimes came across as “goofy.” She was middle-aged and morbidly obese, with an awkward air, and was clumsy. She had a loud, booming voice with a thick country accent and her speech was littered with poor grammar. Her grades were mediocre and she just managed to “squeak by” with a low C each semester. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Some of the other instructors did not like Gladys. They did not feel she would make a good-quality nurse and they wanted to weed her out of the program.

The opportunity came for one of the instructors during a clinical with Gladys on a specialty unit. The instructor wrote up Gladys for behaving "unprofessionally" and for having difficulty with a lab draw procedure. The more this instructor "rode" Gladys, the more her insecurity grew and the worse her performance became in clinical, a vicious cycle. This instructor meticulously documented each of Gladys' clinical shortcomings. By the time Gladys came to me (during the second half of the semester), she was failing clinical.

Now it was my turn with Gladys. It would be up to me to make the judgment call as to whether Gladys passed or failed clinical that semester. If she failed clinical, she would be out of the program, with the possibility of re-entering one year later. I did not feel comfortable being placed in this position. Gladys would need to perform superlatively during my six-week rotation in order to overcome all the "black marks" from the previous six weeks and to earn enough points to pass.

The first clinical day during the second half of the rotation, Gladys had a "deer in the headlight" look. She seemed terrified and was almost shaking. To alleviate her anxiety, I quietly took her aside and gently spoke to her. I told her, "You're in my clinical now. I am not Mrs. ___. I make up my own mind about students and am not swayed by prior negative reports. You need to put the bad experiences of the past six weeks out of your mind and start anew today." With that soothing overture, she seemed to immediately calm down. I then gently probed, "What can I do to help you succeed?"

The transformation in Gladys from that point on was amazing. She went from being a nervous wreck to a much more confident and competent student. I allowed her space, but kept a watchful eye on her from a nonthreatening distance. I complimented her on positives. I sought her input about her preferences concerning patient assignments and procedures she would like to perform. She came to clinical prepared and her performance on the unit truly was superlative. In fact, patients and staff alike remarked about Gladys' high quality care. She received many compliments on the floor.

Gladys passed the semester and six months later, graduated from the program. After that, I lost track of Gladys.

Fast track six years later. My husband and I are eating lunch in a restaurant in a neighboring town. I suddenly hear a familiar booming voice from the past, calling out my name. It is Gladys! She relates to me about her satisfying career as a corrections nurse. She also appears much slimmer. She states she has lost over 60 pounds since her recent gastric bypass surgery. She seems very happy with her life.

This goes to show, that as nursing instructors, sometimes students can surprise us. Gladys, contrary to all the negative expectations, went on to become a successful nurse working in corrections, which is a very challenging practice area. Gladys is now a contributing and functioning member of society. We have to be careful not to judge from the outward appearance, but to allow the true human potential to shine through.

* Name changed

Thank you for such a beautiful example of compassionate encouragement.

Specializes in M/S, MICU, CVICU, SICU, ER, Trauma, NICU.

This was nice. I always go for the underdog just because people are judged so harshly, so quickly. It's not fair.

Kudos to the instructor, and kudos to Gladys!

Specializes in Operating Room.

VickyRN, this was a fantastic article. You can see this every clinical rotation. Some poor soul becomes the "goat" and they get grief from the instructor the whole time. Thank God, I was never the goat, but I had friends who were. It's horrible, and this can become a self fulfilling prophecy-if someone believes they are "stupid" or clueless then they start acting as such. Bless you for giving this student the boost she needed to succeed!:yeah:

Specializes in Gerontological, cardiac, med-surg, peds.

the two most important management secrets: the pygmalion and galatea effects

your expectations of people and their expectations of themselves are the key factors in how well people perform at work. known as the pygmalion effect and the galatea effect, respectively, the power of expectations cannot be overestimated. these are the fundamental principles you can apply to performance expectations and potential performance improvement at work.

we hear a lot about adult learning theory and the premier responsibility of the student in the teaching-learning process. the pygmalion effect is the flip side to this theoretical stance.

this can be by no means 100% inclusive, but i have noticed over the years that the expectations of people in positions of authority tend to have great sway over the behavior of people under their influence. prime examples are parents, employers, or teachers. people tend to rise or lower themselves to meet our expectations, whether good or bad.

Nursing is a field that offers a place for many different talents and personality types. We should revel in this!

VickyRN - you are exactly the way a teacher should be, encouraging and having a lot of patience. Sometimes we only need someone to believe in us instead of pushing us down for every mistake we do. You gave her a second chance, you trusted her and gave her confidence. Bravo Nurse, Bravo!

What a wonderful story. You are a good person with a good heart who gave someone a chance and now Gladys is helping others. I wish I had had an instructor like you in school and I wish I had one like you now that I am a new nurse. I actually thought about quitting school because of instructors, I had one or two that had their favorites and I was the quiet one, paying attention in class, but always uncomfortable and afraid to even ask questions. And now I am a new nurse and I feel the same. I struggle most days I work and I have asked for help and have been ignored. When I asked if I could go to nights because I thought it would be a slower pace, I was told to suck it up. I have been criticized in front of staff and my confidence has just disappeared. I spend my days off at home miserable thinking on how I need to do something else. If I just had one mentor, one person who truly wanted to teach me, I know I could shine.

Awesome!

Just like we need to give all of our patients and students the benefit of the doubt and not be swayed by others-look fresh with our own eyes emphatically.

otessa

Specializes in Rehab, Med Surg, Home Care.

We have begun to deal with the tendency to horizontal violence in our field; when will we own up to the prevalence of comparable behavior from instructors toward students. Bullying does NOT produce a stronger/ better prepared etc. etc graduate nurse and never will.

Thank you for being the exception; wish I'd had an instructor like you.

Specializes in Geriatric.

How I wish the instructors at my nursing school were like you. During my program, I was just like Gladys. I was failing clinicals for the first 4 weeks of the last semester of the LVN/LPN program . I lacked self-confidence during clinicals and came across to my patients and other nursing staff as timid, anxious and very nervous. The nurse manager at the hospital eventually passed a do-not-return order on me due to the frequency of complaints from patients about this. The coordinator of the program withdrew me without the option of using the other available clinical site to finish my clinical course. Now, I'm out of the program, depressed, wondering what turn my life is going to take. Well, like someone once told me, the evil (or good) that men do shall turn around and haunt them in the future. I am not seeking for vengeance. Vengeance is not mine, it is God's. Gladys was very lucky to have you as an instructor.

Specializes in Staff Nurse LTC/ CALA.

Sadly to say this does happen and there are times that instructors just need to retire once they have lost the passion for the job.Even thought others may not look, smell or appear as we think they should, it is not reason to judge and mistreat them, we do not know the underlying situations.