What to Expect from Nursing Mentors and Students

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According to the Nursing and Midwifery council (NMC, 2008) a mentor is someone who must facilitate students and others to develop their competence. This definition of mentor is ratified by Parsloe (2009): To support and encourage individuals to manage their own learning in order that they may maximise their potential, develop their skills, improve their performance and become the person they want to be. Another NMC publication from 2006: “Standards to support learning and assessment in practice” says that The role of the sign-off mentor and/or practice teacher is to make judgments about whether a student has achieved the required standards of proficiency for safe and effective practice for entry to the NMC register. Reading these three standards it looks simple what to expect from mentor and student during the process of teaching / learning. But in my experience, after twelve years of being a nurse, although sometimes it’s stressful, most of the time mentoring is a very rewarding aspect of nursing. As a registered nurse with twelve years of experience I already aware of the problems and stresses on the other side in which nursing staff must work under. However, mentoring is also a very rewarding aspect of nursing. During the time I was a student I had good and bad experiences. I specially remember a bad experience when I was to work on a maternity ward. The day I arrived, my mentor told me “If you don’t want to come it’s ok, because they don’t pay me for being a mentor, so I won’t teach you anything at all¨. In that moment I promised myself that I would make a big effort as a future nurse and mentor to make the teaching/learning experience of my mentees as positive and advantageous as possible. With that purpose, this essay will... ... middle of paper ... ...g environment can have a direct effect on the mentor – student relationship and on the process of giving feedback. It is essential that the mentor prepares prior to a student arriving on the ward in order to use the learning environment to its full potential. There is also certainly scope for further research to be carried out in relation to mentor / mentee relationships and how this can impact on both learning of the student and the mentor. The same can be said about the process of giving feedback; once again the current literature finds it difficult to agree on a specific formula on how to achieve this. The most important thing that I will take away from my experience is how I can improve for the next time I mentor a student nurse. I will be looking to improve on the way in which I give feedback so that it is done in a way that supports learning and not animosity.

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