Published
Welcome to the Nurse Educator Forum. It is my desire that you find this a warm, inviting place and will come here often for friendly, collegial discussions.
Let me introduce myself: I have been an ADN nurse educator in a small community college in North Carolina for the past two years. My areas of specialty are medical-surgical, OBGYN and immediate newborn, and cardiac nursing. In addition to teaching, I conduct clinicals on general medical-surgical, PEDS, postpartum, and cardiac step-down units. Along with being a full time nursing instructor, I am working on my Masters in Nursing Education. I am enrolled in a fully online curricula and have been very satisfied with this so far.
I have learned much these past two years but, I have so much more to learn! I look forward to hearing from you.
I am a novice educator; full-time faculty in TN since 2019. I teach in an undergrad BSN program. I have been a nurse for 9yrs with pediatrics and adult critical care as my background. Right now I teach in our Foundations Nursing course with beginner nursing students. It's definitely been a challenge and adjustment but I've learned a lot in the 3 terms I've taught so far. I would like to become well educated and trained in simulation education and get CHSE certification in the next year.
Hi there! I am a newer clinical instructor. I was a clinical instructor in fall 2019 for students in their psych rotation at the facility where I am a weekend option adolescent RN but I often float to adults, seniors and the ECT lab. I am in an MSN nurse educator program and expect to graduate in the spring 2022. I love teaching adults and taught childbirth education, CPR, and other community/family classes many years ago before I became a nurse. I knew I wanted to become an instructor in nursing school but needed some nurse experience first! I have only worked psych and plan to stay in psych although I'm not totally opposed to clinical instructing in other clinical environments later, after I graduate with my NE/MSN. I have been told that masters prepared mental health/psych instructors are not very easy to find. I haven't read through all 500+ responses of this thread (yet!) but I'm wondering if you all find this to be the case?
I just accepted another mental health clinical instructor position for spring but this one is not where I work. I really enjoyed last semester at my own facility because I knew all the staff and they were so kind to my students. I guess I'm just looking for advice who have "been there, done that" at facilities that they are not familiar with.
Thank you!
cowboysandangels, BSN
171 Posts
My dream is to become a nurse educator. I have my BSN and also my National School Nurse Certification. My background is pediatrics only. I worked at our local children's hospital for 12 years before taking a position at a school which houses a large population of children with special needs and complex medical needs. What are your thoughts on my dream? Is it a difficult transition from traditional nursing to educating? I realize that teaching in my elementary school is not the same as educating nurses but I would love to learn how to do so. Looking to start an online MSN program soon.