The single most important thing you can do as a nursing student

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GET A HOSPITAL JOB.

I understand that you're a single parent, that you already have a job at Starbucks that you love, that you don't intend to work as a nurse in the hospital setting, that you don't want to because you live with your parents and don't want to over stress yourself.

What we are seeing is the "nursing shortage" being served by a glut of new grads, leaving many without jobs once they graduate. The best thing you can do is front load this by getting in before you've graduated. I can't tell you how many out of work graduates I know. The landscape is littered with them.

Here is how you do it: clinicals are an excellent way to get in. Do a really good job in clinicals. Be ready and present for everything. Be willing to do anything. Be nice to the patients and respectful to the staff. You don't have to know how to do everything, but you do need to put your ability to work as part of a team on display. Then, ask the nurse manager if you can get her or him a resume to start as a NA/PCA/PCT, even if the position is only contingent. Once your foot is in the door you'll have access to the internal job listings and that is where the gold is.

Once you've given them a resume, bother them. Call and email them once a week; they're busy, sure, but most of them appreciate tenacity.

Other ways of doing it are to get dressed up and just go to the hospital with a resume. Ask to meet with the NM for a few minutes, practice your 30 second elevator speech about why that unit is your hearts desire and why you'd be an asset. Then give him or her the resume and, afterwards, again, bother them.

Seriously people, I am in Detroit, we have three or four very large health systems serving the area and a few smaller ones and no one is lining up to offer jobs to nursing school graduates.

A final note: if the hospital you get hired at has an externship program for graduate nurses, this is a bonus since it means that as soon as you've finished classes you can start work as a nurse with a preceptor.

Good luck.

Well im starting a nurse tech job today! I will work 3days mon's fri's & sat's from 3p-11p & although the hospital doesnt hire lpn's unless you will be enrolled in a RN program by september 2013 which i wont be because i'll just be finishing up my program in August(hopefully) & studying for the nclex I'm still gonna get this experience & i can put it on my resume & on applications at other hospitals i know still hires LPN's. I'm in my 2nd semester Med surge 1 & this job couldnt come at a much better time than now! Only 3 more weeks left of school YES INDEED I'LL TAKE IT! my manager lets us make our schedule a month in advance according to my school schedule so thats a plus. I thought i wasnt gonna work this 1st semester & i havent since August but with gas eatin up half of my budget(i drive 45 mins everyday to school) MAMA GOTTA HAVE SUM FUNDS COMING IN lol! & i just dont feel good asking my bf & parents for $$$ all the time EVEN THOUGH they dont mind & have told me they are here to help im just too stubborn(the taurus bull in me). I just look at school as temporary & as long as i keep up my 6 days of week studying maintaining my B avgerage i'll be ok! Sacrifice im making to make a better life for my future kids & hubby!

I couldn't agree with the OP more. Where I work it seems like almost all the CNA's are going for nursing. When they graduate they will have a big advantage being an internal hire. Hospitals will almost always hire someone from the inside first before they hire someone who does not work for them (assuming you are in good standing with the hospital). Around here the new grads who had jobs first were those who already had healthcare experience, regardless of ADN/BSN.

Yes, new grads without hospital experience still find jobs, but around here at least it seems to much much harder. And when you are applying for new grad jobs you have to think about all the nursing students who already work for that hospital who are also applying.

Specializes in L&D.
Of course I can't argue with you and I would never consider doing so. Everyone's experience and needs will vary.

I will only say that the vast majority (probably all) of the new grads who can't seem to get hired today had exactly the same idea.

Oh yeah, I didn't think you were arguing. I just believe that some people can handle a hospital job during school, and some cannot. I am one of those that cannot at the moment.

I do not believe I want to work in a hospital after graduation, so if I end up with a job outside or inside of a hospital, I'm fine with it. I have no particular want to work in a specific area, just as long as I'm being a RN. I live in a city where unemployment is low, and jobs are there. I am very lucky.

I'd love to know what city that is :)

Specializes in L&D.

Omaha, Nebraska! The land of Warren Buffett! :p

Specializes in L&D.

Nebraska and North Dakota were the only 2 states in the entire United States to have unemployment rates below 4% in September. This is why I feel very lucky.

Specializes in Critical Care, Clinical Documentation Specialist.

I agree with you fully, I graduate in May and am better prepared than most in my class! Just like you start a patient with discharge planning, I started nursing school with job planning. I know I wanted to get into the new grad residency at a University hospital, so I started planning how to get there. I started as a CNA in a SNF and moved forward when I got an ACP position in the PACU at the University Hospital.

I am treating this job as a year long interview. I am always friendly, have a smile on my face and work my butt off. When the CNAs (and fellow ACPs) are sitting on the computers, I'm stocking the warmers or on transports. I always help the floor nurses settle the patients when I bring them up, I ask relevant questions when we get ICU patients and have been thanked by many nurses for helping them with difficult, time consuming patients. I take pride in my job and do whatever is necessary to make our unit a success.

I have already had my charge nurse ask me if I will be applying to their department once I graduate. I told her no because I want the foundational experience of an ICU before I work in the PACU as an RN, she totally understood. I now have one job possibility when I graduate, but even if I don't take it, I know they will support me when I apply to another department.

I've heard it said, "It's not what you know, but who you know". There is truth to that, but what isn't mentioned is you need to go out and MEET those people - get a relevant job, work hard and make that employer want you to keep working for them.

BTW - I'm a parent (hubby works out of town most of the time) with kids. I take time for them and they know this will not be forever, we are a team and will succeed as a team!

Thanks, Me-erThanMe. I'll keep Omaha in mind when I graduate :)

I'm also from Nebraska. I'm in Lincoln. And there are no jobs here. Yes unemployment is low.. But being a new grad is going to make it hard to find a job here. I want to go to Omaha when I graduate in may. But idk if that will be possible because there are no jobs!! Ahhh!

Specializes in Nursing Education, CVICU, Float Pool.

I did this. The local hospital where I work, where my school does most of our in patient clinicals, hires nursing new grads yearly, but those who already work there as an CNA, almost always get hired with no problems. We've had some get offered their jobs right after completing their interview.

I started out working as a tech, but it seems that all it got me was hands on experience. That came out wrong. The experience is VERY valuable. What I meant is that I don't think this led me to a job...... My problem is that I go to school in a different state that I plan to work. I'm in a 3 yr BSN program at an out of stage college. Right after my first year I was hired to work as a tech in the ICU of a local hospital. The nurse managers emphasized "growing the employees" as in hiring techs to become the future nurses... I know i had a future job there. I'm now a senior, and had to leave my job. It was starting to come down to "should I do my hw & study? Or should I go to work today?" I was a couple of points below passing. I spoke to my unit manager who said my hours were already as little as possible, and there were no PRN positions available. I had to cut my losses. Although the experience was great, It wouldn't garuntee me a job in the state I am actually from anyway.

I've been a PCT in a CCU for 8 years and this is my first semester of nursing school. I have taken full advantage during this time and it has come in handy this semester. I just got my grade for my first care plan and I made a really high A. I have also become a great resources for my classmates, when trying to figure out why we do what we do a certain way I'm able to explain it to them in an easier way. I still work full time (3 12 hr shifts fri-sun this semester)and hope to continue working full time as long as possible so I can keep my full time insurance premium for myself and kiddos.

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