Published
My potential BSN program requires "nursing statistics" or students can take a statistics course offered by the sociology department.
Is/was statistics a part of your curriculum? If so, is/was the statistics instructor from a department other than mathematics?
Any opinions/observations about statistics in general?
Is there a "Nursing as a second language" course out there somewhere? :)
Reference: http://ace.acadiau.ca/arts/phil/why_phil/scores.htm
Very funny . . . . .
steph
I took statistics for my BSN and hated it. I passed it the second time, but took it a third time so I could get a grade I could live with. It brought me to tears regularly, even the third time around. I'm one of the ADN grads that swears to this day that the BSN is and was almost useless- could have gotten just as smart in 6 months rather than 3 years. BUT, I use what I learned in statistics every day, and wish I could have learned more. I highly recommend taking the class, even though I personally hated every minute of it.
I loved statistics. It was required in BSN program so we could have some idea how to interpret research articles. Since more and more policies are based on evidence based practice we need to know how to interpret those studies. Otherwise, we are taking someone else's word as what is best for our practice. Depends on how protective you feel about your practice how you might feel about statistics.
Hi, BSN and recently Diploma Nursing in India require Statistics. I am a Masters in Nursing and I currently teach Statistics for them. I find it good, especially because, it will help Nurses, use research in a better way and rationalize their findings in figures. People do like facts and figures!!!
Spidey's mom, ADN, BSN, RN
11,305 Posts
I am good at English . . . hated math. Not crazy about stats either.
The thing I don't like about stats is that it isn't black and white, concrete. You CAN massage it . . .make it turn out how you want. And the latitude of percentage for error . . .
My stats teacher says stats is used mostly by the "touchy-feely" types . .although he didn't use that phrase.
It isn't science so much as psychology . . .
steph