Thursday, December 8, 2011

Teachers

Some people really have no business stepping foot inside an educational institution. This semester I have had instructors that have totally changed my life for good and bad. One clinical instructor has allowed me to grow and progress to a level I never considered possible as a nurse. She expected so much out of me and I desired each week to impress her, to know my stuff, and to perform on the clinical floor. I will always be grateful for the instruction AND the confidence that she has shown in me.

Another instructor is a joke to the word education and has no business attempting to instill knowledge, that she has not gained into students attempting to learn a new art. She is a brand new instructor and  has an aura about her that seems as though she believes her self gods gift to nursing education when in reality she commands disrespect, pity, and disdain.

From the experience I have only strengthen my desire to one day enter nursing education and provide students with the guidance they deserve. Nursing school should be hard and demanding and require a great deal of effort. This does not mean however that instructors should adopt a sense of godliness when in reality their knowledge is severely lacking. Nursing education is currently suffering from a lack of quality faculty to fill the thousands of faculty openings across the country and regrettably the students are suffering.

I have attended 5 universities in the course of my education including; private, public, Division I, regional, Online, and community colleges . . . and I have never been so disgusted by the quality of my education or an instructor as I am at this point. The good thing is . . . . only 6 days left in the semester!!!!!

Here is what I have learned about what a teacher should be to aid their students:


  • Be prepared - don't just show up with pre printed slides provided by another instructor or the book publisher. Do some homework and be sure that you at least have a basic grasp on the material you will be presenting.


  • Be Humble -  you don't know everything, don't pretend that you do.  Your students will respect you more if you can admit you gaps in knowledge.
  • Be Respectful - if you say something  .. . do it! Understand that you students are adults too and deserve basic common respect as does any human being.  If you arrange a meeting . . . BE THERE!
  • Respond to Emails and Phone calls - enough said.
  • Provide Clear Instructions - if the instructions are provided clearly once you will not have to do it again.  Simply prepare lessons and assignments with the end in mind provide a rubric and give this to students.
  • Practice what you preach - your students will be watching you.  We don't know how to be nurses yet. Practice what you preach.
  • Don't become a teacher if you do not have basic communication skills 
  • Give feedback - we are here to learn . . . help us!
  • If students are failing your course - ITs YOUR FAULT! if good students are doing badly in your course yet doing well on national exams . . . its time to look at yourself!
I will always be grateful for the excellent teachers that I have had and the many well prepared instructors that take the needed time to provide us with the education that we hope to attain while spending an enormous amount on it.  The sad thing is. . . the one bad apple can spoil the bunch! Lawn service allen tx


2nd degree bsn methodist college of nursing reviews

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Exercise

I have been spending the past couple of days working on building a website about running bleachers.  This has kept me pretty busy, but it is something that I love.  Not the running bleachers as much as just the working out and staying in shape.  This keeps me sane during nursing school. Anyway check it out I don't think you will be dissappointed.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Get NCLEX prep tool

This tool from ATI is a great NCLEX prep tool. You can throw it on your ipod or iphone and practice NCLEX questions wherever you are . . . check it out.

 There are also a few free NCLEX prep tools.  This one costs about $20 but I think it is worth it.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Nursing School Test Taking

Okay, I've gotta plug this book one more time because it saved be during my first semester of nursing school.  It is called Test Success: Test-Taking Techniques for Beginning Nursing Students (click to view on Barnes & Noble), testing is a bit different in a BSN program, you are required to "think critically" and this book really helps you learn the game.  Thats all it really is, BSN tests are a game and once you figure out the strategies it becomes much easier.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Med Error

I admit it, I'm not proud of it, I knew it would come some day but I just hoped it would not be so early in my career.  I made a medication error.  I gave my patient Lactobacillus in the wrong form.  Lucky for the patient and me this was a VERY small and insignificant medication error.  I was supposed to give him another form of this probiotic but failed to read closely enough and administered the wrong med.  I immediately told my nurse and teacher who were supportive and cautioned me to read more carefully and pay better attention in the future. I felt pretty lousy, although it wasn't really a big deal, what if it had been. I have learned my lesson!

Monday, October 3, 2011

Respiratory Nursing

Clinicals this weekend in many ways restored my desire to be a nurse.  I think it had a lot to do with my clinical instructor.  She was mean, nice, helpfull . . . you get the picture.  She drilled us about our patients, their conditions, and the meds they were on, but at the same time she treated us like adults and allowed us to see many procedures and found opportunities to see procedures, practice skills etc.  Sadly, clinical instructors as good as her are hard to come by but on the up note this was the first time in nearly two months that I was excited to be in nursing school.

Click Below to Continue

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Cardiac Cycle Animation

Learning the cardiac cycle is essential to preforming well in nursing school and in working as a professional nurse.  Below are a few links to help learn the cardiac cycle.  There are some animations on the cardiac cycle.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGlFBzaTuoI&feature=related                           

Below is a link to the best series of videos that I have found.  It is by a professor named Dr. Najeeb and he uses them in his USMLE prep course.  Search through his youtube page to find many other helpful videos.  This series of 8 videos on the cardiac cycle should leave you with a very complete understanding.  He provides his own animations of the cardiac cycle.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbivIaFPoQI

Monday, September 26, 2011

Grade Inflation

Nursing School Grade Inflation

I have had grade inflation on my mind a lot lately for a couple reasons.  I fear the MCON is the king of grade inflation in some ways, and it concerns me that students are not fully prepared to practice in the role of RN.  Despite being able to memorize basic information I am not confident in some students abilities to act as competent members of health care teams.  Is it the students fault?  I am not entirely sure, if we are not challenged to learn concepts and only required to memorize a few simple facts to pass a test basic human nature will take over and students will become lazy and only memorize those simple facts.  I have been fighting to continue to dive into material truly learn concepts despite being spoon fed answers from instructors.

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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Psychotropic Drugs

Here is a simple list of the major psychotropic drug classifications, their method of action, and major side effcts.  This is not complete, of course, but it gives a basic idea for study purposes.

Click below to see guide:

Stressed Nursing Student

Okay, I was a bit upset last night.

Time to move on.  We have our first mental health exam tomorrow.  I have really enjoyed the mental health rotation at the hospital.  In this rotation we really just talk with the patients, but you meet some of the most fascinating individuals and have a chance to learn much more in depth about various mental disorders.  I do not think that I will ever work in a mental health capacity, but I am sure that the experiences gained working with these individuals will create life long memories.  How many people do you know have been locked in a room with 30 bipolar and schizophrenic patients?  It really has helped me to see the thin line that separates sane from insane or mental health from mental disorder.  I will always be grateful for the appropriate balance of chemicals in my brain.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

DON"T GO TO MCON

Granted I currently hold a 4.0 GPA at MCON, but I will tell you. . . go anywhere else!

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Fall Semester

This semester we are only taking three classes; Complex Med Surg, Mental Health, and Quantitative Research.  We now have two clinical days so we get to be in the hospital much more which is good.  Now that I am beginning to acquire some skills nursing is starting to become much more enjoyable.  On Saturday mornings I am on the lock down mental health unit (which is a lot of fun)  then on Sundays I am on the Oncology floor.
This Saturday we have a big Cardiac test in Complex, it will be our first grade for the semester and actually accounts for a total of 13% of our total course grade.  I have been working really hard (my wife tells me to cut back on my study time) and it has paid off, I was able to squeak by the first two semesters with a 4.0 GPA.  The program is front loaded so if I can pull off another decent GPA this semester I will really be in the clear.
I need to add some study tips on here eventually because I have found several things that really seem to help out a lot with learning the material.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Summer Almost Over

This has been a VERY busy summer.  We moved, my wife started a new job, I took 16 credits, my son had surgery. .. . It has been a bit stressful.  I have enjoyed clinical much more this semester as we are now able to give shots, starts IVs etc. . . I started my first IV a couple weeks ago.  That was a bit stressful as the patient was 88 years old and I had only ever done it on a rubber arm or on the young arm of one of my classmates.  I am proud to say I started it on my first try and it went very smooth.

Summer is almost over so I am beginning to prep for finals.  Then Fall starts right away. . . No rest for the nursing student!

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Second Degree BSN

Second Degree BSN semester two. So first semester is finally over.  I managed to squeak by with a 4.0 at the end and more than anything I am just happy that it is over with.  This semester will be BUSY!  We are studying Med-Surg which is a six credit class and 5 other courses on top of that.  Oh, and since it is a summer semester it is only 12 weeks long.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

How to prepare for your first day of nursing school.


First of all RELAX! Yes, nursing school is hard and it will beat you up a bit but you will not survive if you are stressed out. You will hear horror stories from friends, family, other nursing students about how rough it will be, but don't listen to all of this.

Take sometime to think about your life and how to keep it in order, set your priorities (nursing school should be up toward the top), make sure you are balanced and you will be fine.

As far as being prepared for the first day, I would suggest taking a crash course in critical thinking. If you plan to pass the NCLEX you must learn how to think critically. Buy a book off of Amazon.com or from Barnes and Nobel that talks about basic test taking strategies and critical thinking steps and work though it. One book in particular that I study almost more than my text books is: Test Success for beginning nursing students. It provides some test taking tips and strategies as well as critical thinking basics.

Seriously, relax. Get a gym membership or find out if your school has a free gym (mine does). If you are not taking care of yourself you won't make it. Take a speed reading course or learn how to improve reading comprehension. There is a lot of reading in nursing school, and if you are like me you don't really learn by reading. Learn how to comprehend more of your reading.

Go to the VARK website and find out what your preferred learning style is. Take the simple test on that site and then spend sometime researching ways to enhance your learning through that method. I am a kinesthetic learner, which means I learn by doing so I take TONS of practice tests per each chapter. I also draw pictures and go to the lab a lot. This is how I learn but it is different for everyone. I can't read my text word for word, for me that is just a waste of time.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Websites Heart & Lung Health Assessment Study


I found some websites that are pretty helpful with Heart and Lung Study:

This website has some cadaver dissection videos. . . do not click if you are not comfortable seeing human dissection. They are very informative and provide excellent visual instruction.

Very simple animation depicting the electrical conduction of the heart.

Simple animation with narration and quizes, covering electrical conduction and diastole and systole.

Heart sounds.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Second Degree BSN


So the second degree BSN is a beast all its own. Most people stress about nursing school. In the Second Degree programs, also called Accelerated BSN (ABSN) programs we complete nursing school in under two years. Yep! A BSN in about a year and a half.

Some schools have their ABSN programs last only about 13 months. It is crazy stuff. You really have to dedicate yourself pretty much to reading 24/7. It does all pay off though, my class is 19 people and we will have our BSN in about 18 months.

I don't plan to stop there. I don't think that you really can. While nursing provides a lot of benefits as far as a career you really should go on and get an MSN or DNP. I plan to become a CRNA right now. That is a Nurse Anesthetist for many reasons the top two being; I want to be around surgery and I want to make money. The nursing community is really pushing for advanced degrees for nurses anyway so it will be great to be ahead of the curve.


The above picture is an image from the MCON.edu website which is the school I attend and it is an actual picture from the SIM lab connected to the hospital that students use on a very regular basis.
This is the MCON building where I spend all my time. From about 7 or 8 am until the evening and ALL day on weekends.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Wild Turkeys

Well Peoria is kinda strange. As I was walking home from class a couple days ago I crossed paths with a wild turkey. Right in the middle of downtown. We saw four walk trough our front yard just the other day too it is strange.

School is busy still, but I am starting to learn exactly what I need to be stressing about and what I can relax about a little bit.

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Friday, January 28, 2011

MCON 10 year anniversary

So the school had its ten year anniversary last night. It was a small little gathering with some of the staff and previous graduates and students. The school has been around MUCH longer than ten years, but I guess that must have been when they actually received accredidation or something.

The staff of the school is all VERY helpfull and excited about the school and the students. I was able to meet and talk with some of the recruiters and admission staff. The first group of second degree BSN students graduates next semester and they are all very excited to see how they do on the NCLEX. I too am excited to see how well the ciriculum is preparing me for the only test that actually matters. I feel like our program is very intense and hopefully they are actually teaching us what we need to know.

They are highly focused on the NCLEX and improving pass rates and we do a lot of reading and "critical thinking", there is also a lot of study material available for us to prepare for the test.

I bet that the Second degree BSN program has a higher pass rate than the college overall. From what I have seen we seem to be more focused and excited about the route we are on. . . . and we seem to complain less!!

Thursday, January 27, 2011

How to Study for Nursing School

I'm actually not really sure what the best way to study is. I know that I am putting in at least 8 hours a day of reading, typing, note taking etc. . .


Amazon Book


I did well on the first test. At least I didn't do as bad as I thought I would. Our school has an adjusted rubric, meaning that anything under 93 is a B and anything under 84 is a C. I got a B on the first test. I am hoping to still get an A in Holistic Nursing. This is our hardest course for the semester and if I can get an A or high B it will really boost my confidence in an overall high GPA.

I know this shouldn't matter to me too much, but I have hopes of CRNA school or NP school and I want to land a good job right out of school, so I just think a good GPA will keep more doors open.

Here are a few things that I do that help my studying:
  • Read all assigned readings.
  • Make notes in the book as I go.
  • Turn the powerpoints into questions and answer those questions.
  • Repeat step three two or three times.
  • Teach a classmate what I have learned.
  • Approach the professor at least once per section with questions.
  • Take all practice tests from the book, ATI, book website & included CD-ROM
Basically, you have to shut off the other parts of your life that are distractions. Our school does have a gym connected with the hospital that we can use for free. I am sigining up for that now.
Plus I have an awesome wife that is very supportive!!!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

First Quiz

Well we had our first quiz on Sunday and our first test is due today. Nursing school really does require you to think a bit differently than other types of tests. These tests are not factual they are much more theory and in depth thinking.

We have our assignments printed out for this upcomming week . . . . It turned out to be a two page excel document!!! Yeah I am pretty busy. Nursing school is really a 7 day a week job.

It is hard to get everything organized and still have time to get everything done. I feel like I could spend the entire week just trying to organize!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Reading, Reading, & more Reading

Well. . . .let me just say that there is a lot of reading in nursing school. We are taking 18 credits this semester spread out over 6 classes. Each class requires A LOT of reading. Many people say that it is very easy to get overwhelmed in nursing school, especially in ABSN programs. I have decided to focus on the more important classes that will make me a better nurse and not spend too much time stressing over the other less important classes.

Dimensions of Holistic Nursing and Health Assessments are perhaps the most important courses this semester and I am pretty sure I could spend all day reading for both courses and still not have read enough.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

First Day of Nursing School

Well the first day of our Accelerated BSN program was a bit overwhelming. A lot of information is thrown at you and it is hard to determine how to organize it all. I called my friend who is about to graduate medical school and another who just finished a BSN program to get some advice on how to organize myself and my courses.

I have been told to focus on the important classes and not get caught up with others that might not matter as much. This semester that means that I should focus on my Dimensions of Holistic Nursing course and my Health Assesment class.

So far I am impressed with both my professors and my classmates. Since this is a Second Degree BSN program everyone already has a degree in another field other than nursing. We have like six guys in our cohort out of 20 total students.

I have decided to use a folder system to keep myself organized. I purchased a folder for each course where I will keep the syllabus and any handouts given. I also purchased a planner that has an entire month overview and a weekly view where I can plan out my assignments and tests. . . . Hope it works!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Nursing School Orientation

Well orientation is on Saturday. It is up at the college campus from 8am to 2pm. I think there are only going to be about 15 - 20 people in my class because it is an ABSN. We already have some reading assignments given before we even start in our HUGE nursing text!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The School and SIM Lab

I went up to the Methodist College of Nursing campus yesterday and again today to check out the SIM lab. The staff at both are VERY helpful and open to suggestions from students to make the school better. There are about 550 students that attend the various programs at the school.

The Methodist Hospital (where clinical are held) is pretty huge. There is even a gym with a few lap lanes that students can use. The school is on the opposite side of the highway from the hospital and has a few study rooms and a nice library. The school is actually an old hotel that the hospital bought and converted into a school. In fact, there are bath tubs in all of the faculty’s offices.

Why Nursing

Aside from all the reasons mentioned above I really appreciate the opportunity to work three days a week and be considered a full time employee. This will allow me to spend more time with my family and friends and only work the three full days. Nursing also provides the opportunity to move up a career ladder in a very precise way. There is the ability to become a teacher at a college of nursing. In the end I feel that the overall top reason to be a nurse is that the opportunities are completely endless both career and pay wise.

Male In Nursing

Being a male going into nursing is obviously something that must be addressed. In fact just today my brother in law who is a head vet technician was teaching in a children’s Sunday school class and he introduced himself as a head vet tech, the children of course had no idea what that was and he explained that it was like being a head nurse at that point the children laughed their heads off and called him a girl.

MCON Campus

The school itself is a bit run down but appears to have more than adequate space and facilities to house the near 400 students that attend. There is a small library that is open 24 hours a day with several private study rooms. There is a large computer lab and many small and large classrooms. The bookstore has a handful of MCON apparel all in girly colors of course so I am sure that I will not buy one. The building is about 9 floors and houses the on campus housing as well. It has controlled access that only opens the doors with an ID badge. I will update on the facilities once school begins.

Peoria - The Town

The town of Peoria is an interesting town it is a very small town compared to Houston where I moved from. It only has about 120,000 people. The downtown is pretty ghetto but they are building nice, new homes and retail on the north side of town. It is pretty easy to get around here due to pretty minimal traffic so I would suggest living on the north side near Dunlap and the Shops of Grand Prairie. In reality there are only a few streets that get you around town, War Memorial, Knoxville, the 74 and a few others.

Moving to Peoria

Following the wise advice of the same friend in medical school I called MCON and asked that my acceptance to the school be deferred until the following semester. They were willing to allow for me to be the first application in the stack for the next semester but would not defer.

Within a week of starting my new desk job I was about ready to blow my brains out. It was not for me and I knew that I could not continue in this job. After some deliberation I decided to call MCON and check on my application status. Thankfully I was again accepted to attend the ABSN program starting in January 2011.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Applying to Methodist College of Nursing

Life went on and I had totally convinced myself that nursing was not for me. To make a long story short I enrolled in a program to finish my Bachelors degree in Business and begin thinking again about medicine. I investigated medical school or podiatry school. Both of these routes took too long and in the end I knew that I did not have the scholastic stamina to stick it out. At the same time I continued to look into nursing. I discovered that in reality CRNAs can make an incredible living. Not only that but many nurses in other fields make 70-80k a year and nurse practitioners can make over 100k. A brand new grad RN can make at least $21/hour in most states and up to $27/hour or more in some areas.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Making My Decision 2008 - 2010

The decision to go into nursing was a long one. I suppose that I was initially interested in it about three years ago when my wife and I were living in a small town in Oklahoma. At the time I needed a job and the town did not offer many opportunities other than a two year ADN nursing program at the local community college. I applied and was accepted. A good friend of mine that was in medical school suggested that I investigate CRNA or Nurse Anesthetist.