My Strong Medicine

The adventures of a male nurse navigating through life, staying fit, surviving the journey.

Posts Tagged ‘student’

Wading in the job fair ‘pool’

Posted by Sean on September 5, 2011

Over at Scrubs I share my experience at my first job fair as an ACNP student! Exciting times lie ahead!

My first job fair

In all my years of professional employment, I’ve never attended a job fair. Not that I wasn’t interested, I’ve just been lucky enough to have a job lined up each time they were appropriate. I already had a job in an ICU 2 months prior to graduating nursing school. I was into my 4th year as an employee when I graduated with my BSN. So up until now they really didn’t make much sense for me.

Fast forward to the present. I’m just completing my first year in my ACNP program with 4 more semesters to go (yes, there is a faint light at the end of the tunnel). While I’m a little bit ahead of slope, I thought I’d attend the job fair that was offered recently just to see what to make of it. I must say, prior to making my way there, I was actually quite nervous?? Not sure why, since I’m not even close to that stage in my new role!

In my current ACNP program we had the unique opportunity to attend a job fair geared for physicians. It seems to be the new trend in health care since the allied health care professionals, sometimes called physician extenders are being utilized more and more in a wide variety of settings (PA’s & NP’s)

It was surreal to be walking amongst the ranks of physicians. Once again I’m still getting used to this new advanced role (not that I’ve even got my hands dirty yet!).

This particular fair you could pre-register and upload your CV and/or resume via their website. They also had the option of bringing them with you.

The fair was a smörgåsbord of gifts, sales pitches, shoulder rubbing and networking! Everything and anything was on the plate. It was a pleasant surprise to see so many recruiters excited and interested in potential Nurse Practitioner hirees! I was overwhelmed by the positive feedback and encouragement all the recruiters showed, not to mention all the cool gadgets and free pens (you know how we nurses like our pens)!

The purpose of me attending a job fair an entire 18 months too early was just to learn what to expect from one of these shindigs, get a sense of what employers are looking for, get my name out there, and ultimately start the career ball rolling as soon as possible.

Mission accomplished.

I learned a couple things about job fairs:

  • Come prepared with a sense of what you are looking for. ( I honestly wasn’t)
  • Ask and answer as many questions as possible. (ask specifically about the job and all it entails)
  • Sign up for any and all lists that are offered – can you say networking?
  • Don’t be shy – enjoy the free stuff while it lasts!
  • Be careful – some recruiters can be like used-car salesmen/saleswomen (need I explain that one?)

I must say, after this experience I am even more excited to get my hands dirty and jump head first into my advanced practice career. The sky being the limit isn’t just a saying anymore!

My first job fair | Scrubs – The Leading Lifestyle Nursing Magazine Featuring Inspirational and Informational Nursing Articles

Posted in health | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

The pack-rat nursing student

Posted by Sean on June 3, 2011

I jest at the reality of carrying ‘everything’ with you to and from class.

Packing your bags

No. I didn’t get fired. Heh heh.

This is yet another student quandary for all the student readers out there. Well I guess this could be for anyone, since at one time or another we have all been students – more specifically your time as a nursing student.

My first ‘stint’ as a nursing student, I utilized a locker for many supplies. I also attended classes and had my clinical fairly close to home. So supplies were not much of an issue for me. What didn’t fit in my bag(s), or what I couldn’t fit into my locker I would ‘store’ in my car – since the parking lot was only a jot down one block. Basically everything I ever needed was in ‘reach’, or was accessible with very little effort.

This time around the nursing school ‘block’ is a tad different. Grad school seems to always present new and interesting challenges for me (I could tell you some stories). The scary part is, I’m just now getting through my first year. I still have another 4 semester to go!!!!

Anyhoo…

Here’s my dilemma.

How in the world do you pack everything you need for your day of classes and/or clinicals without carrying around half a dozen bags? I’m trying to prevent the “I’ve moved out of my house” look while I’m on campus. It’s as if I’m packing for a long trip that never happens.

Right now I’ve whittle it down to just 3 separate bags. I’m toting around my backpack that has all my note taking materials, folders, class supplies, netbook, etc. The core of my ‘school’ supplies are in my backpack.

Then I have another messenger bag. This is the potpourri bag. Anything I can’t fit in the backpack I’m shoving into this bag. Extra food, layered clothing (the weather where I live is extremely unpredictable), umbrella, clinical supplies (like my stethoscope and other needed materials), and anything else I can think of that I might want or need during my ‘stay’ on campus.

Lastly is my lunch tote. The insulated kind with multiple pockets and zippers to hold my pre-made meals, water, and other miscellaneous snacks.

Let me clarify some things first:

  • I travel a great distance from home to school – in excess of an hour drive one way.
  • I have the ‘marathon’ of classes kind of day – one day a week classes that are back-to-back. Thankfully they are all in the same building.
  • The closest parking lot that I can consistently park my car in is approximately 4-5 blocks away up on the top of the hill of campus (not an easy hill to trek mind you).
  • I am a growing boy! I eat often, and I’m always hungry. I tend to perpetually eat /snack. No joke. I always get the sarcasm from fellow students asking my how much food I bring (a lot).
  • No, I refuse to purchase any food while on campus. I think you know why. (if not read some of my past health articles)
  • I only bring what is absolutely necessary for class time and clinical time.
  • As the semesters progress I’m going to have to bring a change of clothes due to proper dress attire when required.
  • I could rent a locker – but it would be pointless since I wouldn’t’ leave any supplies there overnight.

So my question is, or maybe it’s not really a question but an inquiry. How does everyone else do it? What do you utilize when you have to lug so much around campus? Is there anyway to make this just a tad easier on myself? Anyone have a recommendation on a better backpack or other bag?

Inquiring minds REALLY want to know.

Packing your bags | Scrubs Magazine

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Panic-stricken student

Posted by Sean on May 16, 2011

My latest post over at Scrubs is all about my warm fuzzy feelings I have at the beginning of every semester.

The spring semester has come and gone. I survived – barely. In the interim the wife and I took a mini-vacation get away (that was so rightfully deserved).

Summer semester has begun and the wave of anxiety and fear is ruling my mind and my world. Why is it that the beginning of every semester starts out the same:

Read class outline

  • Panic!

Read class syllabus

  • Panic even more!!

View required reading material

  • Choke back the tears and try not to regress to an infantile state~!!

View exam schedule

  • Barely save yourself from passing out after you have hyperventilated enough to fill a hot-air balloon!!!!!!!

*RINSE – AND- REPEAT the following experience for each individual class you are taking*

The start of the semester includes trying to figure out how you can extend the amount of hours in one day because 24 hours is just simply not enough time to complete all that is required.

Also, you begin to bargain with your subconscious and your body as to how much sleep you REALLY need.

The rationing of food and water is optional since all you really need is your favorite choice of caffeine (and in my case that would be coffee).

Oh, did I mention I just purchased a new coffee maker?

Yes, the summer semester has started like a drag race. No easing into it – let’s just leap forward at Mach 1 and see if we can hang on for dear life.

I for one think the summer semester is the TOUGHEST of them all because you have to figure out a way not to be influenced by the oh-so beautiful weather.

Am I the only one (nursing student) that thinks this way? I have been accused of being quite the odd bird.

Student insanity | Scrubs Magazine

Posted in health, humor | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

Ever Uhm Been Uhm Distracted Uhm

Posted by Sean on March 9, 2011

tv-guy-01 zoning

Image source: Brad Fitzpatrick

Have you ever attended a lecture, or listened to a lecture, and the presenter says the word “uhm”. Not just says the word, but says it repeatedly. In fact it’s present at the beginning and end of every sentence with additional uhm’s thrown into the middle of the sentence from time to time. Their entire speech is dangled in between uhm’s. The uhm’s will break the ice of a new topic that’s introduced and will trail off at the end of a closing argument.

The word uhm is said so much that all of a sudden all you focus on and all you actually hear is that darn word ‘UHM’.

Pretty soon the nuts and bolts of the material being presented is eternally lost. You get so lost that you find yourself counting the number of uhm’s! Then you spend the remaining time of the session trying to pry that damn word out of your head!

Anyone else ever have this happen to them? Or, am I all alone on my little island? LOL

Posted in humor, random | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Storing Student ‘Stuff’?

Posted by Sean on January 6, 2011

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leoniestair

Image source: (Google) apartmenttherapy

So the new semester has started and school is in full swing (heck it’s at warp speed already) – and classes just stared yesterday!!

No. I’m not stressing. No, not at all. (insert heavy sarcasm at your leisure)

I’m technically taking the same amount of credits as last semester, but due to the amount of credits per course I’m taking an additional course. So I’m on campus an extra day each week. That small fun-fact alone increases my stress level since I commute.

I’m not complaining really (or at least I’m trying), just trying to get all this stuff straight in my mind and create a plan of attack. Knowing me, it will be mid-semester before I accomplish that!


-insert sinister laugh when appropriate-


But, I digress.

As a nursing student, most of the ‘stuff’ I’ve acquired and created I’ve kept for reference. By stuff, I mean all my classwork, assignments, notes, etc. Over the years this ‘stuff’ has started to pile up. Just this past fall I started to whittle down the ‘stuff’. I decided since I’m past my Bachelors in Nursing, and now onto my Advanced Practice degree, I think it’s a safe bet to discard my notes from my basic nursing school education. It’s been over 5 years, and I might have referred to the stuff for that first year and then maybe when I started my journey for my Bachelors.

I just don’t need it.

So now I need to figure out how to efficiently store and utilize my current academic ‘stuff’??

Any suggestions?

Up until now I’ve (bundled) wrapped them up, labeled them and ‘stuffed’ my ‘stuff’ into a storage bin (plastic tote or something similar). I’ve tried my best to label them so that when I DO need to find it I won’t spend hours picking through the bay of hail.

Fellow students and academic pursuers… how do you ‘stuff’ your ‘stuff’ (yeah, sorry I think my play on words is funny).

 


-sidebar-

Any George Carlin fans out there? Every time I talk/refer/read about ‘stuff’ I think of his ‘graphic’ stand-up comedy skit about ‘stuff’. If you can handle his language… it’s quite comical. I’ll let you Google that one.

Posted in health | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

Making the Grade in Nursing

Posted by Sean on December 16, 2010

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During my entrance into this wonderful profession I can still remember the stress over grades. Most ‘students’ in general want to excel at their studies. So as nursing students we fought for every point on our exams. From the first semester all the way to our senior semester there were certain students that just HAD to get that ‘A’.

I was one of them ‘in the beginning’. As the semesters rolled on I realized that being a competent practitioner was not about the ‘grades’ you got in school. Excelling as a nurse was not about the ‘exams’. What mattered most was how you put it all together for the ‘bigger picture’. That bigger picture was and still is all about your patients.

Does an A student equate to a ‘strong’ nurse?

Does a C student equate to a ‘weak’ nurse?

Nope.

In fact in my experience your ‘grades’ as a student have absolutely no bearing on how you perform your duties as a nurse.

That’s the rub.

You can be a rock star-like student nurse. You can kick @ss and take names on all your exams, your clinical performances and even ‘knock them dead’ when checking off a new ‘skill session’. But none of it will matter once you get out there and practice the art of nursing.

Sure getting the good grades and mastering the material is going to assist you and even make your ‘job’ easier in the beginning (and in the long run some times), but if you can’t apply your knowledge, generate some sharp critical thinking skills and develop a compassion for the people you take care of,  you will not succeed as a nurse.

In fact it’s my believe you will fail as a nurse (but that’s another story).

I only bring this to light since I’m back in the saddle again. My first semester as an acute care nurse practitioner student and I’m already caught up in the world of ‘grades’. I’m feeling like a failure if  I don’t get the ‘A’, and I really need to stop it.

I need to center myself and be sure to keep my focus on the big picture. I will grasp and master the concepts, but I will not let the ‘grade’ dictate my success.

For all the ‘students’ out there – don’t lose sight of the big picture. In the end, your patient won’t give a damn what your grades were as a student. They will however give a damn about how you care for them.

Posted in health | Tagged: , | 8 Comments »

Cranial Nerves mnemonic

Posted by Sean on November 15, 2010

Ooo
Ooo
Ooo
To..
We allll know this little diddy all too well. Just about any and everyone who is in the health care field has had to memorize, absorb and comprehend the sensory and motor function of the 12 cranial nerves.
Over the years many have created some very ‘flashy’ ways of remembering them.
I stumbled upon this one via Twitter & Tumblr. The blog is called Undergrad RN.
The picture below is just awesome.
Yet another cool way to remember the 12 cranial nerves.

Sort of hits home for me, since we are going through the Neuro stuff in my advanced pathophysiology class right now!
Weird how things work out like that?

Posted in random | Tagged: | 3 Comments »

Student-Reached Critical-Mass

Posted by Sean on October 3, 2010

up_lateImage Source : Google

There comes a point when the effort to remain awake AND alert exceeds the ability to consume / understand/ comprehend the material you are studying.

I’m sitting here at my computer desk re-reading and re-typing this weeks notes and I find my brain just simply shutting off? No warning, no prompt. Just…

POOF

One minute I’m reading, typing, comprehending….. saying to myself, “uh-huh. Yep, I remember this”.

The next minute I’m in a zombie-like trance in front of my screen. I’m Carol-Ann staring at the snow on the TV screen??

Then the bobbing starts.

Oh- you KNOW what I’m talking about. Back in my military days we called it ‘doing the funky-chicken’. Your getting sleepy-tired and your head drops, chin to your chest. You realize where your head is or you feel your chin hitting your chest and you do a ‘OH Wait a minute’ moment and jerk your head up. This cycle can continue on for minutes to hours if you let it.

So this is the ‘critical mass’ I’m talking about.

In the effort to be studious and take advantage of my time, I’m not contributing to my learning just by ‘putting in some hours’. My brain has officially shut off and I can’t seem to turn it back on.

I need the quality, not the quantity of studying.

Yep – calling it a night.

Posted in health, humor, random | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »

Question For All My Fellow Students

Posted by Sean on September 11, 2010

HeadExplodeBig

Image Source: Google

Does anyone know if this is possible?

I sure think it might happen.

Whew…

Posted in health, humor | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

My Life Lately = Stressed Out Student = S.O.S.

Posted by Sean on September 8, 2010

Full-time Graduate Student

Master’s degree program

5 classes

I used to be in bed early every night. Nope. That’s over:

 

student-studying

Image Source: SPcollege

I also use to be relatively stress free. Nope That’s over too:

 

bean_overwhelmed_answer_2_xlarge

Image Source: sodahead

It’s only the second week of classes???

S.

O.

S.

SEND HELP

Posted in health, humor | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

 
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