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Hiring a New Manager- What do you seek?
Did you end up getting the job? If so (or not), please email me. I am interviewing for manager on Monday. Thanks.
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Got new job as LVN/LPN instructor
the students were very cut-throat and if you didn't basically tell them everything that was on their quizzes and exams, they went straight to the DON and complained on me. I received a lot of attitude and mumbles of how bad of an instructor i was. i took it a little bit personally but not too bad. there was a lot of stumbling and then intimidation by the students. after my first go round, i became better and better, totally comfortable teaching the lectures. i always wanted to tell these interesting stories in the OB class since i've seen some really bad OB emergencies. i figured it would be interesting (they loved it!), but i always ended up running late on my lectures. they will do anything they can to intimidate and take control of the classroom, but you have to set the bar from the beginning. establish control and reprimand from day 1. dont try to get their approval, teach them that you are only telling them how it is in the real world, and that type of behavior is not acceptable as a professional. they will walk all over you and push you to find your limits. just dont lose control during class. okay, hopefully you have a better population than i did. mine was the type of vocational school that was really expensive but they never turned down anybody and financed anybody, regardless of credit history. so it was a last resort for many of them. it was all about the numbers. anytime you told them they needed to read a chapter in their book, they were all quick to moan and groan about how much $$ they were paying to be TAUGHT or TOLD the material on the tests. and management needed to maintain the passing rate to keep the funding coming in. my job was truly a business, not a school. i can only hope you have a much better experience than them. oh yeah, and dont EVER think any of your students is your friend. they will turn on you SO quickly. Don't let your guard down and keep those boundaries up. It will bite you in the butt as it did to me my first go round. i quickly learned that you cannot trust anybody. sad but true.
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Got new job as LVN/LPN instructor
well what i quickly learned that they fully expected me to use a variety of creative teaching, not just lecture. i was on a serious time crunch the whole time i was there. there was always some sort of activity by the school or evals on their last instructors that cut into my lecture time. my classes were not always the quickest of learners, due to the type of place i taught. it was very frustrating how they cut a 3 hr lecture time into 1 hr, but i was still expected to cover all of the material. i came in early and stayed late, and even met the students back at the school after clinicals to try to tutor the students. til they said no more overtime. they also began to tell me that the students 'paid to get passing grades' and i was to do whatever was necessary to make them pass. they even fired a seasoned instructor because some students failed her class- medical math. i got out as soon as this happened, i felt very unethical and couldn't be a part of it anymore, but the job itself was awesome.
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Ob specific interview questions
also make sure to voice that in emergent or questionable situations, you would not hesitate to contact the MD on call in the middle of the night, cuz that happens all the time, and they would rather you err on the safe side than take things into your own hands being a new nurse
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Ob specific interview questions
tell me what you would do if you had multiple urgent/emergent events going on at the same time? tell me of a time when you worked well with a team and how the outcome was positive, tell me of a time when a team worked negatively and the outcome was negative, how did you handle that? how do you respond to frequent new changes on the unit?
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Do you think they/employers are watching what we post?
i have a friend who was fired for a negative comment she posted on one of these sites.
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Best Nursing Programs In Dallas Area?
regardless of the bad news lately, parkland hospital is the best place to get a start as a new grad. you will see every single complication and possibility that will ever happen, and it will boost your confidence and really look great on your resume.
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L&D in Texas- suggestions?
yeah well tell that to their HR dept! i applied there almost 2 months ago!!
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L&D in Texas- suggestions?
I'm currently living in the DFW area of TX and am a L&D nurse and the job situation is very sporifice. So I am looking to travel to other cities in Texas to work, probably do like 7 on, 7 off and fly or drive home, depending on the distance. Does anyone have any recommendations on cities/hospitals that have good L&D reputations or bad ones? I don't know much about TX besides this area I'm in, so any ideas will be helpful. Thanks!
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Going into psych after 15 yrs of hospital nursing
Well, I had a good interview today at a psych facility that has about 5-6 specialized units, and pretty sure I'll get the job. I'm excited for the change. I've done L&D for the past 12 yrs. I will be working 3-11 shift, and I know that is difficult, certainly not my first choice, but it's what was available. I would LOVE any advice, warnings, etc about working in the psych world! Thanks!
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Is it worth just going from BSN rather than just a ADN..
i went the ADN route and graduated back in 1996, and never had any intention on getting my BSN, i figured i still had no problem getting jobs, what was the difference? but then i got a job where they had magnet status and really nicely pushed their nurses to further their education by great education reimbursement and discount programs with an online ADN-BSN program, so i decided to give it a shot. took me a year of hard work, but i graduated with my BSN last oct, and have been pleasantly surprised at potential employers' comments about my BSN status. seems like it's really starting to make a difference these days. i'd say go for it. or at least plan on it soon after.
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Definitely made mistake, now paying for it...
maybe work some magic and make the perfect job appear on my doorstep tomorrow? lol i know you guys cant help, i guess i'm just here to pout and vent about how i've been the gold-star nurse for 15 yrs and all of a sudden, since 'the event' happened last year, i've just been so shaken up and have no confidence and apparently my decision-making is impaired. i'm bitter that i'm being blamed for something i didn't do.
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Considering transfer to psych
i've been a RN for 15 yrs, none of that being psych. i'm in a situation right now where a job in psych may be my only option. i am very open to it, it's not like i hate the idea. i worked for 2 yrs in an ER situation where i encountered quite a bit of psych pts. can anyone give me the pro's and con's of converting to a psych nurse? i would be doing 3-11 mon-fri.
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Definitely made mistake, now paying for it...
I've been a RN for 15 yrs and have been in the same specialty for 12 yrs. I've never had a problem getting a job, did travel nursing for a few years, and was at a day job for the past year. things got bad there- the management totally lost control and the ship was spiraling down the drain, so i jumped ship to the first thing i could get, which was a night shift. i've done years of night shifts, but now i have young children, and for some reason, my body and mind could not handle night shift anymore. i started getting physically ill due to the schedule. one day, i acted very stupidly and called and quit the job on the spot. i didn't even think i could do a final 2 weeks. first time i'd ever done that or left a job under bad terms. well this is a very large national corporation and i found out today that i'm not eligible for rehire. i understand that, but certainly nobody would understand my inability to work night shift anymore. day shift was not a possibility at this job. so i've been out of work for over a month now. i thought i would be able to immediately or soon find another job. i feel just horrible about my stupid mistake. my specialty has always been in high demand but it's slowing down right now, and the few jobs that are out there are night shift. i'm behind on my bills, i'm super stressed, i am a single mom. please don't barrade me with criticism for being irresponsible. yes, i was and i know it. i've been on interviews for office jobs but not been hired. most jobs i apply for (which are out of my specialty because they are day shift) dont even call me for an interview. times are really getting bad. somebody help me out! there's a lot more to my story but i know from personal experience that coworkers or former coworkers have figured me out from this site and i've gotten in trouble for what i've said. so i hate to withold prime info, but i will be having stipulations on my license within the next couple of months for a one-time horribly bad event that i just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and i've been blamed for by the board of nursing. i am also awaiting my punishment. so is that enough bad decision-making and a bad enough predicament for one person??? help.
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What do you do when you're a pt?
i dont necessarily let them know i'm a nurse, only if they are friendly and seem receptive, or are around my age or younger. i feel often intimidated by older nurses and am afraid they might think i was bragging or something, or going to try to tell them how to do my job. mostly i just cooperate as much as possible, be a good patient, and do much more for myself than most pts do.