Please help me i am applying to nursing school and need advice on my personal essay

Nursing Students Pre-Nursing

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"Every man has his secret sorrows which the world knows not; and often times we call a man cold when he is only sad." This quote is relevant to the journey I went through in the process of obtaining my associates of pre nursing. The road was long, at times rough, and full of discovery. I had come from a home where abuse from my mother was prevelant after time went on the abuse went from scars on my body as a young child to scars within my heart as an adult. Words such as "you will never make it" , " you think one day you could call yourself a nurse", and "I will watch you fall" were constant reminders in the back of my head. The abuse was daily and each day came with new words of hatred.

I began my journey my senior year of high school as a running start student where if you had passed the college entrance exam you could take classes at the local community college and earn dual credits. I had managed at the age of 17 how to handle college course load, high school courseload, and a full time position. Things had gotten more difficult as I entered college my second year right after high school. My mom had gotten into more fits of rage and continued the abuse that I had endured previously. The verbal harassment came along with times of physical abuse as well.Unfortunately this led to a downfall in my performance seen within my transcripts. I had been stripped away of every ounce of confidence, most happiness, and the hope within myself as this person brought me down. I had experienced anxiety attacks one in particular that had led me to the ER. The doctor questioned me many times before getting the truth behind my anxiety and led me to what I would consider my angel. I had a followup appointment with my doctor whom after counseling sessions, a few refferals, words of encouragement, and support had helped me to achieve this confidence I thought had been lost forever. The nurses were so supportive, caring, kind, thoughtful and told me to never give up within my dreams and how to overcome this time in my life. Just when I had thought about giving up on my dream as a nurse these men and women reassured me on everything nursing stood for and how I could help others the same way they had helped me.

With this new found confidence I took charge and decided to make a change in this cycle. I separated myself from the hateful situation. I had retaken classes that I had not done well in and excelled. I took a position 45 minutes away from my home as a health information management representative within a medical clinic to gain experience within the hospital and have learned vast amounts of information. I had received my certified nursing assistant certification, as well as my H.I.V/AIDS training, and CPR certification. I am soon to start volunteering at a hospital affiliated with my workplace to gain even more experience in a different department of the hospital. I have completed extra credits not needed for my degree to become more knowledgable and prepare me more for the field of nursing. I have discovered through this long journey that although nursing schools are competitive and at times we believe schools wants us to be the "perfect" student with no hardships it is the hardships that will make us greater nurses. I have become confident, personable, caring, and will be able to relate to many people who have gone through the same abuse I have. My ultimate goal after obtaining my BSN is to join the United States Air Force and become a nurse as well as fight for our country. I would like to support soldiers who would have gone through the same abuse as well as their families. Where many would have given up and stopped school I made a difference in my life, fought on, and continued and strived for excellence. Without the nurses and staff at the hospital whom had helped me so much I would have given up on my dream forever. This school I believe will be able to make me carry on my goals and become the best nurse I could be. I am proud of the difference in my life and am confident in what I could bring the the nursing community. Thank you

Stephanie, starting out with a quote is alright, but does that quote have sincere meaning for you? Or did you look it up when you began writing your paper? If it were me, I'd stop at ""Every man has his secret sorrows which the world knows not; and often times we call a man cold when he is only sad." This quote is relevant to the journey I went through in the process of obtaining my associates of pre nursing. The road was long, at times rough, and full of discovery."

and leave the rest of that paragraph out. Again though, write from your heart. Like I said I am not a professional and am in the same boat you are. Idk if I am in any position to give you advice, but since you asked, I wanted to tell you my first impression of your letter.

Specializes in Pedi.

This needs some major editing. There are a lot of grammar, syntax and spelling errors. You go back and forth between the present perfect and plu perfect tenses and it doesn't flow well. I have also never heard of an "associates of pre-nursing." Did your school award an associates degree once you finished your pre-reqs? If not, take that out. I also agree with the other posters- leave out the many details of your personal life. It reads like you are seeking out sympathy for admission into the program. I am sorry that you had that experience (I, too, grew up in an abusive household) but this isn't the appropriate venue to write about it.

Na-na, I'm working on my essay this weekend. Do you mind if I PM you?

sure.no problem.

REWRITTEN ESSAY:

I began my journey to become a nurse from a young age. My brother was seven months old and was diagnosed with severe asthma as well as other complications from birth. From his birth to about his eight years of age he was in and out of hospitals. Watching the way these nurses diligently put smiles on his face, made him comfortable, and helped him heal every time he was hospitalized showed me that this is something so kind, so genuine, and makes a difference in the lives of others. This is something that I need to do.

At the young age of 17 I had the responsibility of high school course load, college course load, as well as a full time position. I had learned time management, handling stress, as well as organization, skills useful for nursing. Things became rough for me and events that occurred turned my life upside down. I had been hospitalized for some conditions and my grades had begun to drop. With this drop in grades I felt hopeless, unconfident, and felt like giving up. When sitting and asking myself other options for a career I always came back to nursing. I knew deep in my heart this is something I need to do. I was reassured of this decision when at my appointments the nurses who took care of me always encouraged me to pursue my dreams, gave me tips and advice, as well as always help me heal more than just exterior wounds.

I had one of two options to quit and give up nursing and let that define me or to push forward and continue through. I had decided to continue. I retook several classes I had not done well in and excelled once I had retaken the material. I took classes not required for my degree to help prepare me to become a better nurse as well as gain knowledge. I completed my certified nursing assistant certification, H.I.V/AIDS training, CPR certification. I did this all while taking a position 45 minutes away from my home as a full time health information management representative for the Franciscan Healthcare System. I took a position far from my home to gain knowledge and experience the drive has been worth everything I have learned. I have completed over 100 hours of volunteer work for an organization called Las Molas where we would perform cultural dances and all proceeds from the ticket sales were donated back to our country of Panama. Our organization also donated food to local food banks, hospitals, and orphanages. I will be starting to volunteer for a neighboring hospital I work for as well.

My ultimate goal is to earn a BSN in nursing and join the United States Air Force to help families all across the world. As I enter my last quarter of school I will do so with confidence knowing I am gaining the knowledge to become a great nurse as well as to help enrich the lives of others. Thank you

In Washington we recieve an associates of pre nursing instead of an associates of arts it is called an associates of pre nursing. This is where we have to take all the requires pre reqs most schools in the U.S offer as well as classes like Organic chemistry which most schools dont require as well as public speaking. In washington you also need a B or better in all sciences or you will not get in.

Associates in pre nursing sounds interesting. It is not something I have heard of before.

Hi again. You did a great a job editing your essay. I like this one much more than the first. Do you have a professor or someone of an educated level that can proofread this for you? I did see several grammatical errors, but this is your rough draft right? Also, you're from Panama? Are you bilingual? If so, include that. I do like how you closed the latter half of the essay with how you persevered.

Yes thank you I'm so glad you guys gave me input it helpe me a lot! And yes I am bilingual I didn't know if that would be good to put in there but now I know so I shall add that in. It is my rough draft so I do need to review the grammar errors. I have problems with run on sentences a lot.

I know it's interesting to hear you guys do not have this associates degree in other states. Curious what states are you from ? I thought that was normal so when you guys finish pre requisites for a bsn program do they just award you an associates of arts?

I know it's interesting to hear you guys do not have this associates degree in other states. Curious what states are you from ? I thought that was normal so when you guys finish pre requisites for a bsn program do they just award you an associates of arts?

My program is an ADN program. My major even while in the pre req mode was As.As. Nur. I am in now and it is AS. Nur. They basically just give you an extra AS while you are doing pre reqs.

I actually think it is important for you to include where you've been. However, it takes up roughly 2/3 of the space you have and where you are/where you're going seems like an afterthought. I would take out the quote because its a bit much, and I would say something like "Every nurse has a story, this is mine..." Talk briefly and indirectly about your past because you don't want them to see you as a potential liability, but focus the majority of how it has propelled you into greatness. Talk about not only what you have done to reach your goals, but examples of how you have changed as a person. It isn't enough to just say that you are caring, etc. Finally, I would speak specifically about aspect of the school that you like. Hope that helps. Thanks for sharing. That is very brave. But, sometimes wearing your heart on your sleeve isn't the best course. dg

I agree with the previous poster about grammar and syntax. It was difficult to read and not college-level writing. In all honesty, that's what you need to work on first. If your essay is too difficult to read because of the way it is written, they won't read past the first paragraph. I hope you don't take offense to this! You should have a writing center on campus and they can assist you there. Or perhaps you have a friend who writes well and will help you.

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