Nurse Educator Adapting to Change
Teaching at the clinical setting before the pandemic was simpler, smoother, and less complex. For the most part, students were trained by preceptors that had been nurses for several years with vast experience and wisdom. The energy in the unit was contagious and the morale was higher.
Fast-forward to today, the stark contrast is that many of the students are now being trained by preceptors that are either recent graduates themselves, contract nurses from out of town, or it’s simply staff that has no desire to teach but are forced to have students shadow them.  Â
What happens is that this creates a ripple of effects. It requires more due diligence from an instructor’s role, including more careful monitoring of the students on the unit floor.Â
 It demands more time spent in post conference discussing and allowing students to fully share their raw and honest emotions of the day. Â
It causes more time to be spent in teaching and reiterating our patient safety core values. But most importantly, from a nurse educator standpoint, it demands that we elicit hope and optimism to the incredible field of nursing that has been through so much. Â
Nursing continues to be the backbone of healthcare today.Â
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