BSN Students: NCLIN 411: Transition to Professional Practice
NCLIN 411 is your last clinical course. It allows you to immerse yourself
into the role of the Registered Nurse and helps you transition into the
profession.
How is NCLIN 411 structured?
NCLIN 411 is scheduled to have a theory portion (a 2 hour lecture plus 2
hours of seminar) weekly plus 24 hours clinical per week. Students are
assigned to a School of Nursing faculty member/clinical instructor plus a
preceptor (a Registered Nurse employed at the clinical site) for the
experience. You will work the hours your preceptor(s) work: hours may
include 12 hour shifts or 8 hour shifts; days, evenings, or nights; and
weekends, depending on the site.
What is the process of being placed in a clinical site for NCLIN 411?
NCLIN 411 placements are available in medical-surgical nursing,
pediatrics, maternal/child nursing, psychosocial nursing, community
health. The placements are arranged in blocks by the NCLIN 411 course
coordinator, individual instructors, and staff in Academic Services.
Once sections, instructors and sites have been negotiated, Dagmar Schmidt
in AS, in conjunction with the course coordinator, prepares an information
packet listing the available sections, sites, and preference sheets.
Students meet with course faculty and Dagmar as a group to discuss NCLIN
411 objectives and the information in the packet. Students have
approximately one week to review the available sites and submit their
preference for specialty area (such as maternity, psychosocial, etc.) and
site.
The forms are turned into AS and assignments are made based on student
interest, availability of sites, learning objectives, and past clinical
placements.
Will I be able to find my own NCLIN 411 placement?
No. All clinical placements are arranged through the School of Nursing. We will try to accomodate your interest, but the objective is to provide placements that serve the interest
of the class as a whole as well as meeting individual objectives. It
is not possible to arrange INDIVIDUAL placements based on student input.
|