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I start nursing classes in the Fall (6 mos from now) and I have some time, so if you could go back in time, is there any material you wish you had reviewed before starting your first semester? I have Fundamentals and Essential Nursing Concepts. Thankfully, all my co-reqs are done-ok, except for Micro which I'm going to take in the summer. Any ideas? Thanks!
I start nursing classes in the Fall (6 mos from now) and I have some time, so if you could go back in time, is there any material you wish you had reviewed before starting your first semester? I have Fundamentals and Essential Nursing Concepts. Thankfully, all my co-reqs are done-ok, except for Micro which I'm going to take in the summer. Any ideas? Thanks!
My best advise is to just relax! You will be so unbelievably busy in the next two years! But it will be great! Dont give up! If you are set on reviewing any material, I would review medical terminology. It is a great help when you first begin clinicals and have no idea what half of the stuff all the nurses and docotors are talking about! Good Luck!
Dosage calculations book, like everyone else said. And use dimensional analysis, it's much easier once you figure it out! You have plenty of time to learn how to do the math, so you should do really well on that math test, if you have one.
Learn how to do blood pressure, pulse, respirations, easy stuff like that in case you don't know.
I would just focus on micro this summer, it's hard at some schools. And definetely relax and enjoy your spare time, b/c soon it will be over :rotfl:
oh, one more thing....there's a book called test success for nursing students, or something similiar to that title...I've heard several people here talk about it. And many schools sell it at the campus bookstore. Anyway, I bought it, and it has questions related to Fundamentals. I didn't pick it up until a few weeks ago, and I saw all these Fundamental questions...so now I'm studying it before tests. Some people have difficulty with taking the nursing school tests, those mult. choice questions throw some people off I've noticed, so it'll help. It's a short book too.
Medical terminology, med math, abbreviations... all helps tremendously... Before I started nursing school I got a job as an aide at a nursing home and took a CNA class, just to make sure I could handle the bodily secretions and all. And it helps to have all the prereqs done so you can concentrate SOLELY on the nursing classes.... they can be stressful enough!
Missy:chuckle
I didn't review any material before starting nursing school. I partied all summer!
I need someone with legal expertise. I work in MO. In a level II trauma center. No in house call. I am required to cover 48 hours on the weekend. Is that legal. I have worked 27 of those 48 in a row, and felt really wiped out. Even the nurses on the floor are only responsible for 12 hours, and possibly 16, but no more. I forgot to mention that I am an OR nurse. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Or tell me who I should talk to, and maybe get this changed.
Management is out of the question. They do not have to work it so they do not care. Help
Sheri257
3,905 Posts
Check with the school. My school puts out a booklet which has all of the nursing school reading and other assignments. If your school has something like that, you could get a jump on what you definitely need to know, instead of just guessing and spending time on books that may or may not help you.
For instance, a lot of pharmacology books teach the math differently than the way my school does. It actually confuses students and makes pharmolcolgy a lot harder for them. So it's always best to go the source to determine exactly what you need to know.