Nursing School: Things To Know Before You Start!

I have just finished my first year in an ADN program, and I remember so well this time last year. I was on these forums almost constantly reading what I could and trying soooo hard to become prepared for the next two years of my life. Let me tell you, these posts are GREAT! Anyone who is about to start nursing school should skim as many posts as possible to get a slight understanding of what your first year might entail. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

After I got my acceptance letter, my life was never the same!

My first semester started with enough drama in my class to last the entire two years of the program! After some brave souls in my class cleared the air, all of that was over and we got on with our learning. So tip number 1......

Stay away from the drama!

In a class full of women and a few select men, there's bound to be boat loads of it. You'll do great to stay away from those starting it, now matter how much you would like to call them out on it! Eventually, everyone realizes where it's coming from, and EVERYONE stays away...

Expect to study more than you've ever had to study before.

School has always been easy for me, and as an adult student, I realized my learning styles and honed my studying habits. Or so I thought ;) Nursing school is a different kind of beast.... you can't memorize information and expect to pass tests. You have to learn how to APPLY the information you've learned. You have to learn how this piece of information correlates with that piece of information. You're thinking WILL be modified without you even noticing that it is.

Study groups don't always study!

I was never one to study well with others because I liked knowing that I found the information myself. But, nevertheless, I gave the study group a try. First two sessions were gossip among most, but definitely entertaining! After that, many of us reduced the groups to those that we felt comfortable would provide us the most appropriate information. Also, it's important that those in your study group study in a similar way to you.

Organization is key!

Save that acceptance letter (as if it weren't already framed on your wall!) as well as every certification, lab slip, and record from your school because you'll need them for your portfolio. Make a quiet study place in your house and fill it with all the things that YOU need to study. Have a book shelf for your car load of books. You'll eventually figure out the routine that works for you... yours is not the same as mine... or anyone else's for that matter.

Communication doesn't always happen.

Networking during nursing school is great... get every piece of information you can from anyone. That girl at the front of the class might know something that you don't, and that lady at the back might be able to share a tip that you'd never thought of. My class even has a facebook group where we share information and important dates (and there are lots of them!) . . . . which reminds me... a calendar is VERY useful! so....

Keep a detailed calendar!

I started my first semester with everything I needed to know in my blackberry (love that thing!) But when it tried to take a bath with my son, I lost it all. When I moved everything to a notebook calendar, I realized it was easier to get the full view anyway... plus I could write many more notes in there! My trouble was remembering to keep it with me... Many days I only brought one book and a pencil to class and forgot my calendar all together.

Your required book list won't be the ONLY books you'll want to have!

Throughout the year... and through my friends in class who were kind enough to share their information... I purchased 5 books that weren't on my required list. They have helped me with everything from test taking skills to understand fluid and electrolytes to conquering those HESI exams that we have to take DURING nursing school too!

Speaking of test taking skills....

you'll need them! Many test questions in nursing school require a knowledge BASE, not necessarily a factual base. Many books that you'll have might have a test taking tutorial in them. Read that time and time again until it sinks in and becomes a habit for you.

Have fun! Nursing school is challenging...

but you need to let your hair down sometimes and relax! Believe me... you'll find time.

There are soooo many things I could tell you, but I think this is a book already. I hope others will come along and add some information for you, as well. Going into my first semester I had NO IDEA what to expect. We had very little guidance from the 2nd year students. Things might have passed a little more smoothly had we been given the heads up on some things... but, then again, that's been much of our journey together this year. Figure it out, learn it, know it! I hope this journey is a great one for you!

Watch Top 10 Tips for Pre-Nursing Students video...

Awesome! Thanks for the tips. I start nursing school in less than 2 weeks! Yay! I'm anticipating quite a hectic life over the next 14 months. It's crazy, but I'm super excited about it! Thanks!

Thank you so much! I am about to start my first semester OFFICIALLY in the nursing program. I am a little nervous but I have been reading some posts and this post has really given me some encouragement. I will be taking a CNA class next month. I'm hoping that by taking that class it will give me some experience and calm my nervous a little about becoming a nurse. I'm curious though, can anyone tell me what I should expect for the CNA class? I'm at midlands tech. Thank you for the help. :)

I really don't know what'd I'd do without this website! So far I've ordered two books just for summer reading, "Saunders Student Nurse Planner" (I made sure to get the 2011-12 guide) and "How to Survive and Maybe Even Love Nursing School". And of course the planner will hopefully help me keep organized, like you said. I'm extremely interested in the "... Made Easy" series, but I'm hoping I can wait a lil' while to purchase it so I can refresh my funds, it's taking all my lil' bit of money.

Thanks for the tips I am sure that they will help me this fall when I start the BSN program at CSU Stanislaus. I am all nerves about transferring to the university, though I have attended a few schools while training for my last career they were all community colleges never an actual university.

The books that I found helpful in my first year that weren't on my required book list were

1. Hesi Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination book - yes, I know we're not taking our boards just yet, but this book is EXTREMELY helpful when it comes to those Hesi tests we have to take throughout the year... and you can NEVER practice too many NCLEX questions. I scored 1066 or above on all sections of my Hesi because of the help of this book.

2. STUDY GUIDES! Our book list never listed study guides for our texts. We, as a class, didn't even realize that study guides were available for our texts until later in the year. So if the study guides aren't listed on your book list, look for them on Amazon or another site!

3. Prentice Hall's Reviews & Rationales: Comprehensive NCLEX-RN Review - again with the NCLEX, but just like the Hesi book, this book is divided into sections that you're covering now. It helps with test taking skills as well, but the best part is that this book is by the people who write the NCLEX-RN test... I've got it on good authority that this book alone will help tremendously when your date to take your boards comes around! And again... you can NEVER do too many NCLEX questions!

4. Nurse's Fast Facts: The Only Book You'll Need For Clinicals - this book is a pocket-sized (almost) reference to many things your instructors will ask you during clinicals. My instructors like these... but of course they weren't on our list... we found out about them second hand.

5. There is a line of book called "... Made Incredibly Easy!" There is everything from Fluid and Electrolytes Made Incredibly Easy! to Cardiovascular... IV Therapy.... Patient Teaching... on and on and on. I only purchased F&E because I struggled with it for a time. Many students had several books in the series. These books just simplify what you're taught in class and maybe present the information in a way that is more understandable to some.

The Saunder's NCLEX-RN book was on our required book list, and I've used it greatly as well.

Thank you posting the list of text you used. I start nursing school on May 23rd and will be ordering some of these to help with studying.

Thanks again for the tips!

Specializes in New Critical care NP, Critical care, Med-surg, LTC.

I also just finished my first year and hope I might have some useful information. If you are an aural learner and not a visual learner, you might be interested in podcasts by FA Davis from the Fundamentals of Nursing text. They're free on-line, you can Google it. I think the best thing you can do is go in knowing your learning style. There is a large volume of work and it's not the time to start investigating - do I learn better when I take notes while reading, or doing review questions, or using the class Powerpoints- you need to be able to hit the ground running.

I have to say that while I could have worked harder, I didn't find the first year to be all that difficult. The testing style was completely new to me and I haven't quite gotten the hang of it as well as I would like. However, I work full time and I've got three kids at home, so I'm doing what I can. I also don't need a lot of sleep compared with some people, so the hours, while inconvenient at times, weren't incredibly exhausting.

I whole-heartedly second the "no drama" plan. If you find that there is someone you don't like, you don't have to like them- don't waste your precious time and energy being aggravated by them. I spent much of my first semester using energy being annoyed by things around me, until I realized that my annoyance certainly wasn't going to change any of those things and all it was doing was keeping me from focusing on what I needed to be doing. There are good teachers, bad teachers, mean teachers, incompetent teachers, and the same with clinical instructors. Unfortunately, you get what you get, and you're going to find the same thing with co-workers in the real world, so you'll have to just deal with it. Be responsible for yourself, your learning and your actions. You've worked hard to get there and you can do it.

Good luck.

Specializes in taking a break from inpatient psychiatric nursing.

Really appreciate your generosity and insights, NursingMom109. Really, really! Thank you.

Thanks and God bless you! :yeah:

That is great advice! I will be starting (hopefully) next fall. Currently I am finishing my pre-reqs and I am super excited/nervous/anxious and ready to apply for nursing! Your advice is welcomed and appreciated! Thank you and Best Wishes! :)

Thanks for the advice!

Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.

On the topic of required reading...check with former students [preferably last year's class] to see how much each text book was actually utilized for your classes. My first year , along time ago I will admit, I paid $240.00 for a book we never even cracked. Huge waste of money! I learned my lesson and the next year only bought the so-called required books that the instructor actually used and spent the rest of my book budget on supplemental texts that were much more helpful. The NCLEX review books are invaluable, get at least one or two. The ...Incredibly easy are also great books, and reasonably priced.

Thank you so much! I am about to start my first semester OFFICIALLY in the nursing program. I am a little nervous but I have been reading some posts and this post has really given me some encouragement. I will be taking a CNA class next month. I'm hoping that by taking that class it will give me some experience and calm my nervous a little about becoming a nurse. I'm curious though, can anyone tell me what I should expect for the CNA class? I'm at midlands tech. Thank you for the help. :)

I took a CNA class in Arizona. It was not hard.(Of course this was a long time ago...I was 17.) We were taught how to take bp and other vitals. Also what's the normal range for those vitals. Transfers, bed making, some HIPAA stuff, patient's rights and privacy also that 'NPO' means, "Don't fill that water jug!" lol. Those kinds of basic things. There was some study time involved. Like 30 min max and worksheet type homework. Don't sweat it.

I just wanted to add my

THANK YOU :redpinkhe

for starting this thread! :D Keep all that advice comin' ladies!(and gents?)