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education

From Proficient to Novice

March 30, 2023 by NurseTwain

Dr. Patricia Benner created the nursing theory of knowledge progression ranging from novice to expert. She describes what it means to be an expert nurse and the step by step trajectory a typical nursing career follows.

Student nurses are novice nurses. New grads progress to advanced beginners after their preceptorships, orientation, and passing the NCLEX. The beginning stages of this theory revolve around building those initial nursing experiences for each different disease process. At the early stages, nurses are able to recognize abnormal findings, but may not be able to decide the appropriate interventions or recommendations to treat those issues. As they gain more experiences, review order sets, and recognize patterns, the nurse becomes competent. Several more years later, the nurse becomes proficient and can expect order sets for each finding. An expert nurse has many years of wisdom and experience to draw back on. They develop intuition, offer more creativity and alternative solutions, and seamlessly care for the whole person.

When I left the bedside, I classify myself as proficient. 5 years at the bedside allowed me to recognize orders, recommend interventions, and expect outcomes based on selected treatments. However, I am only proficient at the bedside. Once I moved into education full time, I am now a novice educator. I relate so much to my novice students in fears of the unknown and learning to be okay with discomfort.

There is so much to learn in each Individual field of nursing. Lecturing disease processes is so different than practicing it at the bedside.

I am a novice nurse again and that is okay.

Until next shift,

Shania

Filed Under: patient stories Tagged With: bedside, benner, education, hospital, medicine, nursing, patienttalk

From Student to Nursing Instructor

January 28, 2023 by NurseTwain

In December 2017, I graduated with my AS in Nursing. 5 years later, I am teaching at the same place where I was a student. There are pros and cons of being a young instructor. It is nice to be able to remember how students are feeling at this stage in their nursing career, however, it is difficult for me and students alike to keep the boundary between a friendship vs. a professional student-teacher relationship… especially considering we are either the same age or I am much younger than the students I am teaching.

Teaching content I practice to a student is a lot different than precepting a new grad nurse. What comes naturally now has to be put into words and create a fine balance between explaining in lay man’s terms to keeping medical terminology.

All that being said, I relate to Benner’s theory of nursing competence. As my students travel from novice to beginner to competent nurses, I am traveling that same continuum as an instructor.

What I have learned in my first year of teaching:

  • There are tiers of instructors.. A Nursing Instructor is different than a Professor of Nursing.. there are many years of tenure and expertise to acheive that title
  • All students must be treated equal. This may sound obvious, however this rule applies in situations that you may not realize. One student or one problem that arises can cause policies to be created that may seem harsh or controlling.. (i.e not allowing Zoom links even when sick with Covid, strict uniform guidelines (buttons not zippers), no recording). There is a reason.
  • Accrediting bodies like TJC do not go away
  • If it isn’t documented, it’s not done still applies
  • A 2 hour lecture can take a full 8 hour day to create
  • There is a serious art to test writing- Nursing Process, Clinical Judgement, Maslow’s, distractors.. Oh, my
  • Managing a classroom while lecturing is very challenging.. Remembering what you said, advancing the PPT, checking the Zoom room, answering questions, keeping students engaged
    I LOVE active learning
  • Incorporating an extra class activity involves many members of faculty
  • What is best for the students is not always what makes them happiest
  • It is okay to not know the answer- Nursing is always changing

I have learned so much already and love my new job. Being a part of a student’s nursing journey is so rewarding.

Until next shift,

Shania

Filed Under: Nursing tips, Uncategorized Tagged With: education, nurseinstructor, nursing, Nursingschool, nursingstudent, patienttalk

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