Instructor Incivility Toward Nursing Students

“An anxious student is practicing Foley catheter insertion on a manikin in the nursing skills laboratory. The instructor rolls her eyes as the student nervously fumbles and breaks sterility.”

A less well known type of incivility.

Incivility and bullying in health care have been much discussed in recent years, as they should be. In this month’s issue, Linda Koharchik focuses on a less well known manifestation of this problem:  instructor incivility toward nursing students. This kind of vertical violence can be particularly distressing, given the fact that nursing instructors function as de facto gatekeepers for entry into practice. Student nurses can’t simply refuse to deal with them.

Eye rolling, reprimands within earshot of classmates, criticism of the student in front of the patient, and even frank bullying and intimidation are examples of instructor behaviors that some students have to cope with. It’s not hard to imagine what this kind of anxiety-provoking “guidance” can do to a student’s performance, leading to yet more abuse from the instructor.

Merely a rite of passage?

Koharchik notes that some authors have suggested that dealing with incivility is a “rite of passage” for students, one that will help them better cope with the challenges of their chosen work. But nursing students are already exposed to plenty of stress during their training, especially […]

2018-07-23T09:15:34-04:00July 23rd, 2018|Nursing|0 Comments

Seeing Potential: The Joys of Teaching Nursing

By Ruth Smillie, MSN, RN, associate professor of nursing at Saint Josephs College, Standish, Maine.

"Buck Up," by zenera / via Flickr. by zenera / via Flickr.

The day I come to class pregnant is one of my favorites. I really hate to be pregnant; I’m 55, grey haired, and way too old to be pregnant. My students are obviously surprised when I waddle in swaybacked with my sudden eight-month pregnancy. They snicker and smile, and then the magic begins.

As each one brings up the “change” they were assigned, I acquire the mask of pregnancy: larger breasts (made from paper bowls), kidney stones and gallstones (collected from outside), more blood volume (once, in a soda bottle), varicose veins (pipe cleaners or string), and so on—all carefully attached to me by duct tape.

I look and feel ridiculous and we all laugh a lot, but that’s not the point. The point is that they remember the changes of pregnancy. Embarrassing as it is, I would do it every day if it helped them learn. I love to teach nursing and it has been an amazing experience.

Students have no idea how incredible they are. Most of mine are just out of high school, young and unaware of their potential. But they have it, and I can […]

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