Happy New Year!

First of all I’d like to wish you all a Happy New Year! I’m not one to bang on about fresh starts and New Year’s resolutions, but if you have any then I wish you the best of luck with them. I finish my nursing course in August, only a matter of months away now, so if I had to make a resolution it would be to leave all my troubles behind and concentrate more on my work. Which leads us to my next bit of gossip about what’s been going on lately.
Once again I must apologise for my complete lack of blogging. Things have been very bumpy for me for the past few months, causing a lack of motivation for my university work. So blogging has been somewhat pushed aside for a while. Back in October, at the start of my placements, serious events happened between my parents that made me decide to leave home for a while as I did not feel able to cope with living with them. I packed up as little as I needed and found myself living at my boyfriend’s (Kov) for around two months, which made things quite difficult as it meant him having to give up his desk for me to do my work and me regularly waking everyone up to get ready for a 7.30am shift. I spent most of my time there living out of bags and feeling very stressed about the entire situation. I brought emotional baggage with me everywhere, including placement, which made it hard for me to concentrate. Luckily for me the first half of my split placement was on such an amazing and inspiring ward, and the nursing staff were more than friendly and supportive. My mentor knew what was going on and always checked up on me to make sure I was ok.
Eventually I was able to move back home when my parents reconciled and went away for Christmas. Unfortunately this meant that I was responsible for buying most of the food for Christmas dinner and cooking it all for those of my family who stayed at home! It was stressful to say the least as I had never made Christmas dinner on my own before.
Catching cold after cold for two months did not help; during my last week of placement I managed to lose my voice and was sent home from placement on my last day. I managed to develop some kind of allergy to something while living at Kov’s – my eyes were constantly sore and itchy and I found myself taking an antihistamine every day, until finally my mentor sent me to A&E to have my eyes examined when I started waking up with puss in my eyes. The problem still persists now.

Moving onto better news, I am going to Sri Lanka for my six week elective placement on the 21st of January, which has come around very quickly! I will be going with four other student nurses from my course, and yesterday we met with a very nice medical student who will be staying in the student house with us when we get there. Of course I am very excited about this opportunity, but also quite nervous as I am still due some vaccinations and still haven’t applied for my visa!
I will also be without Kov for six weeks, something which I know I will struggle with as we are very close. We have been through a hell of a lot through the past few months and suddenly being without him is going to be a shock to the system!
But I will be with some good friends and there is a hell of a lot to do there other than work and study – we’re already getting giddy about going to the elephant orphanage, visiting the temples, lounging on the beaches and climbing Adam’s Peak.

At the moment I am currently enjoying  four weeks off university – that means no lectures, work or placement at all. Enough time to organise Sri Lanka and try to tidy my room up a bit now that Kov is living with me!

Anyway, that was just an update about where I’ve been. I will be posting more very soon about some of the things I have experienced in the past few months, including witnessing my first patient death.
Those of you who started your training only a few months ago, I hope you have enjoyed your much needed time off and that you haven’t been put off nursing completely! I’m sure you can all appreciate how hard it is already.

Until here,  take care and look out for more posts soon :)

Sarah xXx

For the student nurses starting first placement next week

So it’s been a while since I have posted anything written by myself on here! I apologise, but as you can imagine I have been very busy with 3rd year.

I’ve wanted to post this all week after seeing lots of lovely things on Twitter about first year student nurses about to start their first placement on Monday.

First of all I’d like to say good luck! I may not know you all but I am very excited for you and hope that your first placement brings you some of the confidence and joy that you need to inspire you to learn more.

Secondly, I’d like to offer some good advice. Of course you’re all going to be feeling nervous – some of you extremely nervous if you’re quite shy or worried about making mistakes. This is completely normal. If you’re not feeling nervous then hopefully you’re not too over-confident, as this can sometimes lead you to falsely believe that you know more than you do, and you won’t listen. Make sure you do listen, and it’s definitely good practice to note some things down in a small notepad for future reference.

Some of the best advice I can give you is to remember that you are in control of your learning.
Do not be afraid to ask if you can observe a procedure, whether it’s something as small as putting a dressing onto a small wound, or as big as watching someone having their bladder washed out using an irrigation system. As soon as you feel confident enough to do the procedure yourself (if you’re allowed as a student), tell the nurse you want to have a go. If you’re quick enough, you can even request to watch someone have surgery! If you know of a patient who is having an operation, speak to their nurse and ask what their surgeon is like. Mention that you’d quite like to watch and the nurse will either tell you the surgeon doesn’t like students observing, or that the surgeon would be happy to have you there and talk you through the operation.
If you know about a study day/seminar that interests you or relates to whatever you’re studying at university, then go. You don’t need permission from your mentor to go to a study day – you are in control of what you learn and that fact that you’re not at your placement during a study day shouldn’t concern them. Remember – you’re not a paid nurse there. You’re there to learn, not to be an extra pair of hands.

Book spokes. If you’re working in MAU/EAU and want to see what happens to patients before they arrive there, book a day working in A&E. If you’re working on a breast surgery ward, book a day working with the breast care nurses who run clinics and visit patients all over the hospital. Spokes can be very varied depending on what placement you are currently on. I once worked with health visitors in the community and my mentor advised me to spend a day at a nursery where I can observe child development stages. I spent the morning caring for little babies before moving on to playing with older toddlers and then finally watching 4-5yr old children learn. The difference in dependency and skills was amazing and I learned a lot about what I was looking for when I went to visit parents and their children.

Grab it all guys – your learning goes very fast and you don’t want to waste it. Always be open minded – forget all the stereotypes and prejudices you have as you will constantly be surprised by people. You will meet Jewish people who are not interested in Kosher meals and you will one day help an old lady undress only to reveal tattoos. Make the most out of what you’re given and make sure that you always evaluate a placement when you have finished – you are responsible for letting a placement know where they are going wrong so that they can improve for future student nurses and patients.

Last but not least, press on. The course may be hard, you might fail some things or make some mistakes. We’ve all been there, especially me. I find that the best thing to do is to spend as little time as possible putting everything to a halt and feeling sorry for myself, and more time pressing on. It’s what gets me through.  Even if it does mean me ringing up my friends and ranting about things for an hour first.

So again, good luck to you all, and make sure you visit the Student Nursing Times for more useful information on starting your placement!

Sarah xXx

Things to consider before becoming a student nurse by Sarah Gill

Click here to read a perfect article on what to expect if you’re thinking of becoming a student nurse in the UK by Sarah Gill.
Don’t let it scare you… :)

Update: Third year, Student Ambassador & New placement

Thought I’d start off by apologising once again for being very quiet with my blog! I started my third (and final) year of uni on the 19th September and feel like I’ve been doing things non-stop; my parents went away just before I started back and I’d been maintaining the upkeep of our house on my own. Kov and the cat stayed over to keep me company, but with his Ukrainian/Italian roots and my Filipino roots making us passionate food lovers, we always end up cooking elaborate meals that use up a lot of pots and pans. Which in turn meant a lot of washing up and cleaning.

Third Year:
So I have begun my last year of nursing and so far I have enjoyed the units we’re studying this semester. I’m studying Palliative care and Care of  the older person which have been interesting and touching. We had a lecture on Motor Neurone Disease which brought most of us to tears, and have also been learning about cancer, sex for older people and other eye-opening issues.
Although I am now in third year, things don’t feel that different. The only thing that worries me is knowing that after I get back from Sri Lanka next year, I will probably begin preparing to apply for jobs. This scares me! I’m really hoping that I get employed as soon as possible as I will be qualifying with a diploma instead of a degree, which might make things harder for me. I sometimes regret that I didn’t go in for the degree, but at the same time I am already struggling for money with my non-means-tested diploma bursary so much that I know I certainly wouldn’t survive on the means-tested bursary of the degree.

I’ll keep you updated on how third year goes.

Student Ambassador:
During our first week back (we began 2nd and 3rd year with two weeks of lectures) we were told about my university’s student ambassador role. The role would mean working with the university to promote the nursing degree by attending open days at the uni or volunteering to go to high schools and talk to students about nursing. Sounded easy and fun so I decided right away that I would sign up. The lecturer then told us that we could also get paid for some of the work which was a bonus of course. I emailed the lady responsible that day and she replied the day after inviting me to the next school of nursing open day.

The last open day was held on the 8th October and I attended with around ten other student nurses from different branches.  We all wore our uniform. I was told to sit at a table next to a sign saying ‘Adult Nursing Enquiries’ and wait for potential students to sit with me and ask questions. SO many college students and their parents came to the open day which was a great thing to see and was very inspiring. I spoke to a lot of people of different ages and from different cities and I feel that I did a good job. I tried my best to be honest but light-hearted about it all and it seemed to work. I’m hoping to hear from university again to find out when the next event is.

New Placement:
So I have just finished my second week of placement at my local hospital and I can say that it has been hard and heavy work, but that I have enjoyed it. It is a female surgical breast care and urology ward and has recently moved, so at the moment we’re all still trying to figure out where everything is! The ward works with the hospital breast care nurses who come onto the ward daily to speak to patients who have breast cancer – these patients are there to undergo surgery such as a mastectomy or a lumpectomy, which can sometimes be accompanied by treatment such as chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy if needed.  They can also be there to receive a breast reconstruction. I get on very well with the patients and staff and my mentor is lovely – I have trained with her before in the past and she is very understanding of students and passionate about their learning.
Highlights of my placement so far are  seeing a lady finally go home after having some complications after a mastectomy (she was desperate to go home and was very tearful), and on my first day of this placement I accompanied a patient to the theatre where my Mum works! So I had the chance to admit my patient to my Mum who completed the pre-op checklist and made sure she was ready for her operation. It was very odd seeing her work but interesting to see.

Next week I will be working with the breast care nurses at one of the breast clinics held at the hospital. I will also be attending several study days such as a palliative care study day next month, a learning disability awareness study day and respiratory workshops.

Fortunately for me on this placement, I have once again been placed with another student nurse who is also a good friend!  I hang out with her at university and sometimes out (we did the Race for Life this year together and like to drink cocktails at a friend’s house). We were lucky enough to end up together on our very first placement in our 1st year. We were then placed together twice during 2nd year and here we are again now on the same ward helping each other out. I can honestly say that she will be an amazing nurse and that I’m very proud of her for staying on the course despite how difficult it has made her family life. She constantly makes patients her priority during placement and is always kind to them no matter how down or stressed she is feeling. Along with her people skills, she also has more nursing knowledge and skills than she realises and I often find myself asking her for help! I look forward to graduating with her next year :)

So for now, this is my update on how the course is going so far. My apologies again for leaving it so late and for my strange writing style – it has been a while since I have written a long blog post.

I hope all you new student nurses are enjoying your course so far and that you have been inspired by your lecturers and other students. And I hope all you 2nd and 3rd year student nurses continue to be inspired and are looking forward to qualifying.

More blog posts coming soon, I promise! :)

 

Tug on my heart strings

Heart strings (tendons) inside the human heart.

Image and description reblogged from geneticist

 

 

 

New student nurses: So how was your first week?

Hope it went well, let me know :)

xXx

Get some study space

One thing I wish I had done before I started my nursing course was get myself some study space. I decided to stay living at home with my parents and thought that the downstairs dinner table would be good enough. I clearly didn’t know how much paperwork I was going to accumulate and how much mess I was going to make! It was also very annoying for everyone when it came to dinner time and my crap was spread allover the table with no where to move it while we eat.

So a few months ago, during second year (why did I leave it so long?) I finally bought myself this:

It’s a simple desk and shelf system from IKEA (click on the image above to view the product on the IKEA website) and I bought it for £96.99 after a couple of months of saving up. It’s perfect for me as the desk surface is quite big and I can store all my nursing books and files on the shelf right next to me. I’m also about to put a shelf up on the wall above my desk so I can store more documents I collect during third year.

Make sure you get yourself some suitable study space as soon as you can if you don’t already have any. Unless you’re able to comfortably do your work on a laptop on your bed or sofa, you’ll need it. Some storage space is also a very good idea, especially for somewhere to store your portfolio (mine is made up of two ring-binders and I’m about to add a third one).

Hope this helps!

Being a student nurse: My first day of placement

The first ward I ever trained on was an acute stroke ward. I had never, ever looked after patients before, so had never dealt with someone else’s bodily fluids, bathed them, helped them eat… you get the picture. The only things I had ever done that were even close to seeing people naked or caring for them were when I had seen women topless as a bra fitter at Mothercare, helped my grandmother get out of my car or cared for my friends when they were really drunk and vomiting. Yes I really did want to be a nurse. It didn’t matter that I had never cared for patients before.

My first shift was on a Monday morning at 7.15am. I arrived at the door on time and pressed the buzzer. I had visited the ward before to look around and meet my mentor, who wasn’t in on my first day. A friendly looking nurse answered the door and welcomed me in, introducing herself as my associate mentor, who I will rename Louise for confidentiality reasons. She was expecting me so knew who I was. The first thing I noticed was that, of course, the ward was still quite dark with the curtains drawn and the only light was coming from the table lamp on the nursing station. The patients were still sleeping so Louise and I had to whisper. The second thing I noticed was that there was a woman screaming at the other end of the ward.

I had literally only had my feet through the door for one minute before Louise said to me “Now I’m really sorry to have to do this to you on your first day Sarah, but the rest of the nurses are in handover in another room and I really need your help with a patient, would you mind giving me a hand with her?”

Before I could even think about it I had agreed to help, and I was quickly ushered along to the nursing station where I shoved my bag and coat under the desk. I was closer to the screaming patient, who was behind a curtain with her bed lamp on. She was making a lot of noise and I understood that she was in agony. I really wanted to help.

Louise explained quickly that the patient had opened her bowels and we needed to freshen her up. She was also in a huge amount of pain and was dying. I remember feeling my heart pounding as I listened to the patient screaming. I was so nervous.
The next thing I knew I was being handed a disposable pinny and gloves and was following Louise behind the patients curtain. Now, I had worn a pinny and gloves before at university in the simulated practice labs, and had practiced the act of changing bed sheets while a student was lay on them, but I had never wiped a patient’s bottom before or even knew what equipment they used.

Once behind the curtain I could finally see the patient who was a very old, frail looking woman. While I was thinking to myself ‘ohhhh myyyy godddd what am I doing’ Louise began talking me through the procedure. It was a good job she was so nice! She had already prepared everything we needed for the procedure such as wet wipes, towels and fresh sheets. We talked the patient through what we were doing as we used the standard procedure (university taught me how to perform manual handling) to roll the patient onto her side. This was difficult as she was screaming all the way through, and after a gentle struggle she told us that she could only roll onto one side. She rolled onto her right. I was stood on her left which meant I needed to do the wiping, which as I said earlier, I had never done before.
An instinct took over me, one which made me forget that what I was doing was considered ‘disgusting’ to most, and also gave me the urge to help this poor lady instead. I got on with it and made sure I was very thorough for the sake of her hygiene and comfort. Louise held the patients hand throughout and comforted her. We changed her sheets after freshening her up.
I noticed as soon as I saw this patient that her arms and hands were very swollen with fluid, to the point where a finger-poke would make her skin ripple a little.  After returning the patient to her back and making up her top sheets, I noticed that the bottom sheet looked wet with water. Confused, I pointed this out to Louise. I thought the patient had urinated after we had replaced the bottom sheet, but it turned out that I had managed to burst the skin on her left arm and the fluid had leaked out onto the sheets!

I was horrified and felt so guilty, and Louise could see it in my face. She immediately began trying to reassure me that it was unfortunately likely to happen. I felt our patient grab my arm. I looked at the patient and I remember being drawn into her eyes. She looked so sad, and with a very sincere look on her face she said “Please, just kill me. I want to die.”
This really shook me but at the same time I felt like I knew what to say. I held her hand for a few seconds, finished making her top sheets to keep her warm and told her that we would do everything we could to make her comfortable and that we would let her rest. She told me that she was in agony and that she just wanted the pain to end. I remember smoothing her hair back from her face and she lay back on her pillow to rest. Soon after, Louise gave the patient a strong analgesic which was very effective. She died after I had finished my shift.

That experience may sound traumatic but I don’t have any bad feelings toward it. I was thrown into the deep end a little, but it was what I needed and was definitely worth it. Louise agreed that I handled it well and was very grateful. My first day was unforgettable – in fact that whole placement was unforgettable. The staff were so friendly and always willing to teach me, and I definitely learned a lot.

An acute stroke ward is quite a difficult ward to train on as a first timer, as it requires a LOT of lifting patients, dealing with patients who are unconscious or paralysed, a lot of incontinence, learning to communicate with patients who have lost the ability to speak normally or at all, assisting some patients with the difficult task of eating and drinking and getting used to medicating patients who can no longer swallow at all. Thinking back now, I can’t believe how much I was exposed to so fast, and I’m very pleased with that fact. My passion for nursing is increasing everyday and I feel that my first placement has a lot to be thanked for.

Good luck with your first placement when it comes around! I hope yours is as interesting and rewarding as mine :)

Nursing books I own

You may also find these useful – just click on an image if you are interested in knowing more about the book (you will be directed to it’s product description on Amazon)

^ Although no book can fully prepare you for becoming a student nurse, I did find this one very useful. I bought this book before I started the course, during the application process. Bethann has written this book wonderfully and made sure that pretty much everything you need to know is included. I have often referred back to it when I’ve felt a bit stuck or when I need some inspiration.
I once contacted Bethann when I had a question about the Royal College of Nursing and she replied to me right away with some lovely advice! So I have a bit of a soft spot for her anyway and love this book - Google her if you want to know more about how amazing she is :)

^ I bought this book a few years ago when I began an Access to Nursing course at college, and I love it. It’s a huge paperback with lots of detailed illustrations and information. It’s perfect for studying the fundamentals of human biology and I much prefer it to reading information online. I still use this book today and although it is a few years old now, not enough about human anatomy has changed for me to buy the latest edition! So you don’t need to buy the latest edition, which is good as these books are quite expensive, especially if they’re brand new. Just in case you click on the image, the version I have of this book has a different front cover but it is exactly the same inside.

^ The BNF is a book containing information on pretty much every drug you can think of, such as what group they belong to, what they do, their side effects, what drugs they are incompatible with and so on. I didn’t buy mine – the first ward I ever trained on just gave me an old version of it as it gets updated around twice a year. I have an old version and not that much has changed, but legally the book needs to be updated every time information changes or a new drug is introduced. Try and get an old version for free from a ward, but only use it if you want to get an idea of what a drug is for. Don’t rely on an old version when you’re preparing or administering drugs.


^I bought this book during my first year and it has been very useful so far. It is basically a manual that instructs you on how to perform almost every clinical nursing task and it is all written from evidence based practice. For example, it will tell you how to perform the standard procedure of assisting a patient to use a commode, including information such as what equipment to gather, how to explain what you’re going to do to the patient and how to go about the task. It will also tell you about elements of nursing such as effective communication and how to avoid pressure sores etc. I have referenced this book several times and have often referred to it when I am curious about how to perform a procedure that I’m not used to. I would definitely recommend buying this book.

I do also have a nursing dictionary, which I wish I brought to lectures with me more often as I could do with it most of the time! I haven’t posted a link to a nursing dictionary because there are so many of them in all different shapes and sizes – try searching on eBay or amazon for cheaper deals.

Don’t go mad buying books:
When you start your course you will find that your lecturers will encourage you to borrow books from the library rather than buying them. This is because a lot of the books you will need for different assignments are quite expensive, and you may only read them once! For example, I am doing adult nursing, but during my first year I had to study mental health for 5 weeks. Lots of students went out and bought big textbooks on mental health for around £40, but once those 5 weeks were up and the assignment was finished, those books weren’t necessary any more. I simply borrowed a few books from the nursing section in the library for a month, and even then, we were encouraged to read online journals more. Beware though – some books in these university libraries were written more than a decade ago and most lecturers would prefer you to study and reference material that is more current and in date. I won’t reference anything more than 10yrs old, or anything that has gone out of practice.

I do hope this is helpful and a relief for you if you are worried about going out and spending all your money on books! Please let me know if you have any questions or need any help with this topic :)

Being a Student Nurse: How I almost got kicked off the course

There are 2 things I want my fellow student nurses to learn from this post:

1) Don’t try to impress your tutors by going beyond the criteria for a piece of work. You will make it too complicated for yourself, go off track and probably fail.

2) When you submit a piece of work, do everything to make sure that the piece of work has 100%, definitely been submitted.

This is a post about the months of what I can describe as student-nurse hell I went through after failing an essay twice and not being cautious enough when using online submission software. It is a long post, but worth reading if you are worried about going through the same thing and want to understand the process a lot more.

The dreaded essay:
Back in September 2010 I was given an essay to complete and submit before Christmas. The criteria of the essay was to choose a continuing care need of a patient I had cared for, and talk about the assessment tools used to cater for this need. I chose a patient I cared for during my district nursing placement who had Parkinson’s disease and needed help with taking his medication.

Long story short, I ignored the part of the criteria that stated that I only needed to discuss ONE continuing care need, and wrote about several. I failed the essay with a very low grade, and the marker wrote that I hadn’t followed the criteria by sticking to one need and that I had completely wandered off topic. They were of course right. I cried when I read the result of the essay.

The 2nd failed attempt:
So I attended a few re-submission sessions and discussed my essay from start to finish, and completely changed the essay. I don’t submit essays early – we were advised to use up as much time as possible before the deadline to make sure an essay is satisfactory. I made the mistake of using up time until 3.30am, which was 8.5hrs before the 12pm deadline. I was also starting an early shift 4hrs later at 7.30am.

I submitted the essay online through the system my university uses (we cannot submit work by hand at my uni) and the usual window popped up saying like ‘Thank you, your essay was submitted successfully”. I went to bed straight away.

My original plan was to read my essay (which I had emailed to myself) one more time during my break on placement, a few hours before the 12pm deadline. This way I could make sure I was happy with it, or edit it and re-submit it again, as we are allowed to re-submit essays as many times as we want to before a deadline. The ward I was working on at the time was unfortunately insanely busy and I didn’t get a break that day. After my shift, I went home and got changed, then went straight back out to spend the evening taking my grandmother shopping. I got home at 8pm and turned on my laptop to check my emails. There was no email to confirm that my essay had been submitted.

Alarm bells started ringing.

I always received those confirmation emails around 10mins after essay submissions anyway, but never this many hours. I thought back and realised that I didn’t bother waiting for that email and just blindly turned off my laptop and went to bed. I didn’t have a smart phone at the time to alert me of emails. I just went to sleep without a thought.
I logged onto the online submission system again to see what it said about my essay. “This essay has not been completed. Late admissions are not allowed for this assignment”. Meaning that my essay had not gone through the system and that I had automatically failed it. I panicked, rang my brother who is an expert with software, then decided to email my personal tutor. I told her exactly what happened, and I received a quick reply simply stating that I shouldn’t panic and that she has contacted the exams board to see if my essay was submitted after all.

The invitation:
Three months later (no exaggeration), I finally received the email I thought I was never going to get as months had already passed by – an invitation to a Progress Meeting. This meeting meant I needed to go uni, go in a board room with my nursing portfolio and any sufficient evidence to explain why I failed the essay and face four people. One being the nursing programme director, one being the examinations officer, one being the chairman of the board and one being the assessments administrator. Scary stuff huh?
Scary enough to make me cry a lot when I read the email. Yes, I am soft.

I was given one week to arrange a meeting with my personal tutor, work on my portfolio which had been neglected, meet with student support and gather any evidence together. I couldn’t even meet with my personal tutor until the day before my meeting, my portfolio meant spending days gathering all my work together and printing it all off at the library with Kov (my boyfriend) who had to help me arrange it into folders, I needed to write as many reflections as I could to put with my two years worth of work, student support couldn’t help me whatsoever and I had to carry on going on placement and getting with other assignments at the same time.

The worst part:
The two days before my meeting I couldn’t face going into placement. I met with my personal tutor the day before, who managed to put my mind at ease. The good news was that she didn’t believe that they would remove me from the course because  it was my first progress meeting, I had passed everything else that year and I have never been a troublesome student.
The bad news was that there was no one available to go into the meeting with me. At a progress meeting you are allowed to bring one other professional body with you, such as a registered nurse who can back you up, your personal tutor or someone from student support. Absolutely none of these people were available for me and I had to face the fact that I was going in alone.

Later on that night I was in my bedroom with Kov packing my portfolio and making sure I had printed everything I needed. I started feeling nervous as I knew it was getting closer. I began choosing what to wear for the meeting when I recognised the old feelings of a panic attack creeping in. Choosing clothing suddenly became the most stressful task and I couldn’t breathe! I had my panic attack on the floor in front of a pile of clothes, like a drama queen. Thank God I had Kov there to get down on the floor with me and give me a cuddle! He said all the right words in a soothing way and managed to calm me down. I don’t think I thought about it as much afterwards and managed to get some sleep.

The meeting:
My meeting was at 3pm on a Wednesday. I arrived early with Kov, who was there to keep me company while I waited and to comfort me after if all went wrong. Another friend of mine was there for the same meeting with her personal tutor and was scheduled before me. There was another student who went in soon after we arrived. The room we were waiting in was really quiet and I had butterflies all the time we were waiting. The first student came out crying and was very upset. She failed her essay because she was doing the degree and had financial problems, so was working an extra job at the time. The board wanted evidence of her financial problems and that she was working an extra job, but she didn’t know how to find it. She was given a week to provide the evidence.
My friend went in next, with a doctor’s note of evidence that she’d been having problems with her health. She came out of the room after a few minutes with her personal tutor and they cheered “YES!” and hugged. She got through. She came over to me and wished me luck, told me to let her know how it goes.

I was then called in by a man who I had never seen before. I lugged my big heavy bag containing two ring binders full of work  that I had frantically gathered and put together over the past few days, and my laptop in its case in the other. Kov looked more nervous than I did.
The table was huge and I felt really far away from the members of the meeting. The assessments administrator was there to write down everything that we said, which felt very strange and unreal. Luckily I knew two of the other members from lectures and knew that they were very friendly.

They asked me if I knew why I was at the meeting and to explain why I failed the essay. I told them all about how I thought I submitted the essay and how I discovered I hadn’t. I knew it was a technical error on their end, but they don’t accept this as an excuse and I had no proof of it.
They asked if I was under any sort of stress at the time which was a big question. I found myself telling them all about very personal problems I had been having at home and how I had ended up staying at my boyfriend’s for most of the time. I cried… again. Unfortunately there was no proof of any of this whatsoever and they explained that I needed to bring hard evidence of any other problems I had been having. I told them that I didn’t have any and I really couldn’t think if anything else. I mentioned that I had been trying to get our of my overdraft and they suddenly looked up at me. “Overdraft is the magic word’” the chairman said, and he asked me to bring in evidence to prove that I had been in my overdraft as this would indicate financial problems. I was given a week to provide this and left the meeting feeling neither good or bad. Kov was there waiting for me and looking more nervous than anyone else in the room.

When I got home I realised that I did in fact have proof of other problems – I had letters proving that I had been to have a scan on my foot which I had injured and had been having problems with for more than a year. I had a letter from Capital One stating that I had been having problems paying back my debt to them and offering help. I went to my GP surgery and asked the practice nurse to write a note for me to state that I had been having appointments with them regarding my foot, and that I had also attended A&E over it. I printed out all the bank statements to show that I was over a third into my overdraft for months. All of this happened during the time I was struggling with the essay which was, funnily enough, good news. I went back to uni a few days after the meeting and handed all this evidence in.
The week after I received an email to confirm that my evidence was accepted as mitigation and that I was able to continue on the course and able to submit the essay again as a new first attempt! I can say that I was absolutely ecstatic and couldn’t wait to tell everyone.

I worked on the essay again and changed a lot of it as I felt I knew more at this point, and submitted it successfully. A month later I received the results to say that I had passed it. I think I smiled a lot that day. It meant I had completely passed 2nd year.

So here I am now, about to begin 3rd year and putting this all behind me, although I can say that I have learned a LOT of lessons from my experience. It felt like it dragged on forever and it really knocked my confidence. I am very nervous about failing anything again and never want to end up in a progress meeting again. It wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be but it knocked me so much and made me realise that I did not want to be anything else other than a nurse.

There are some things you can do to avoid ending up where I was:
1) Read the criteria, understand it, stick to it. If you can’t do any of those, speak to the tutors who gave you the assignment.
2) Start assignments ASAP! Don’t abandon it for weeks or you’ll end up losing track, and obviously, don’t start them at the last-minute.
3) Make full use of your tutors – at my uni we are able to send tutors a 500 word draft of our essay 2 weeks before the deadline. Do this. If you are struggling with ANY element of an assignment you should tell them and ask for help. Pester them as much as you need to – they are there to help you. This is a good tip.
4) Get your friends from your course to proof read your work. Get someone who isn’t a student nurse to proof read it too – see if they can understand it from an outsider point of view.
5) Don’t just submit work a week or 2 before the deadline and then leave it like that – use those last few weeks to make sure you’re completely happy with your work and keep working on it. There is always room for improvement.
6) Back up your work!! Email copies to yourself. Never trust your computer to behave itself.
7) When you submit that assignment make damn sure it is submitted! Make sure the system tells you that it has gone through, make sure you get the email to confirm it, and keep checking to make sure nothing has failed. Do all this way before the deadline so if anything does go wrong, you have time to contact university and tell them about any technical problems.
8) If you fail an essay, attend the re-submission sessions. This is the best thing you can do if you fail.
9) If you are having problems with health, relationships or finances, keep all proof of it. You will need them to get through a progress meeting.
10) Lastly, don’t just try to get through everything alone. If you need support, get it, whether it’s from your tutors, student support, family or friends.

Good luck with your studies! I hope none of you end up here but if you do, my advice is not to panic and to try to get yourself organised straight away. If you need any advice or have any questions about this post please let me know!

Previous Older Entries

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 531 other followers