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A Day in the Life of a Nursing Student

by Uneeb Khan

As someone who has completed both a B.A. and a full-time nursing student program, I won’t hesitate to say it: being a nursing student is significantly more demanding than pursuing a regular undergraduate degree.
This is mainly because nursing student school needs to provide hands-on training alongside regular classes. The exact requirements for graduation vary from program to program, but you are looking at between 700 and 1000 hours of clinicals before you’re eligible to graduate. This is on top of all the credit hours, lectures, quizzes, research projects, and end-of-term exams you typically also need.

So what does a day in the life of a nursing student really look like? Naturally, I can’t answer for every program or every nursing student – but I can tell you how my typical days have looked since I embarked on this journey.

What Needs to Be Done?

Before you can design a realistic schedule, you need to know what to include in it. Personally, I am fond of creating timetables, so this is a ritual that I go through at the start of every semester: as soon as I register, I start drawing charts and assigning time slots.

There are always some variations in every term, but at the very least, a good nursing student schedule should include the following:

Classes – both lectures and simulation lab sessions, if any of your courses include them.
Clinical rotations – you’ll be attending a specific hospital or outpatient unit. Make sure to account for your commuting time: there is always that one hospital unit that’s further away from everything else.
At-home review time – on average, I will need to spend 2 hours a week doing assignments or reviewing the material on my own for each class I am enroll in. Right before finals, I might need to increase this to 3 or 4 hours per class.
Self-care – this includes basic home errands, home cooking, and exercising first, and actual rest second.
If you are a full-time nursing student, you will most likely enroll in three to five classes per term. At my school, a 3-credit course would require a 3-hour lecture every week. A 4-credit course would add an hour or two at the simulation lab, so I would never take more than one of those at a time.

Sample Nursing Student Schedule


After adding up all these hours, you may be wondering what my days actually look like by midterm.

My school is pretty good at bundling schedules to ensure we can squeeze all our lectures into two or three “study days.” This would leave three full days for “clinicals only.”

On study days


Whenever possible, I would try to enroll in two consecutive lectures rather than leave a free period between them. Why? Mainly because our cafeteria is expensive and gravitates toward deep-fried foods.

I prefer to get the lectures do and out of the way and then have lunch at home while I study.

Last semester, my study days were Mondays and Thursdays. This is how my Mondays looked.

6:00 a.m

Before the day got too hot, I would go out for a 30-minute run, followed by a shower and breakfast. As I live close to campus, it is only a 20-minute drive, even during rush hour.

7:55 a.m

Classes started at 08:00 a.m., so at 07:55, I was usually already in class, picking out a spot and reserving seats for some tardy friends.

8:00 to 11 a.m.: Time for the first lecture of the day. During my last term, this was Maternity Health on Mondays and Nutrition and Disease on Thursdays.

11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m

The Maternity Health lecture was always followed by two hours at the simulation lab, which almost never finish on time. After finishing the lab session, I would usually be left with half an hour or 15 minutes to grab a quick lunch before the following lecture.

1:00 to 4:00 p.m

The second lecture of the day (Health Promotion) was fortunately very conversational and required lots of active participation, so I had no problem staying awake.

4:30 or 4:45 p.m

As soon as I arrived home, I would gather everything I needed for my review time, including a snack, my notes for the day, and my cat for some company.

5:00 to 7:30 p.m

If no assignments were due the following week, my “review time” consisted of transcribing my notes into something neater or creating flashcards for key terms introduced that day. This activity always provided me with a good opportunity for some spaced repetition. Otherwise, I would draft any essays or prepare for any upcoming quizzes.

8:00 p.m.: I tried to be as strict as possible about an “only fun after 8 p.m.” rule at home. Therefore, 8 p.m. was dinner time, followed by an hour of gaming or winding down.

Thursdays were a little easier. Our morning lecturer usually finished 15 minutes ahead of schedule, so I would just head straight to my next lecture (Pharmacology), which would last from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.I would then be home by 2:15 p.m. (as there is no traffic at that time), have lunch, and prep food for the following day. I would then study from 4 to 8 p.m., usually with a clearer head.

On clinical days


Clinicals were a different beast altogether. My school was affiliate with a large city hospital that could house most of my clinical.

The only exceptions were community health, which I had to do at a local government-run clinic. Mental health, where I had to attend a different hospital an hour away.

Before the pandemic, all our clinicals were held at a consistent schedule, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Last semester, they separated us into two bubbles to keep nursing students “socially distanced” and prevent overcrowding in the wards.

Each bubble would then rotate their schedule, attending from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. one week, and from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. the following week.

On the weeks I had the morning shift, this is what my day typically looked like:

6:00 a.m

I rolled out of bed, made myself a hearty grilled cheese sandwich, and headed to the hospital.

6:30 a.m

I arrived at the hospital, ate my sandwich, and had an extra-large coffee inside my car.

7:00 to 10:00 a.m

These were consistently the busiest hours at almost all hospital units.

I would usually begin by listening to the shift handover, which gave me an excellent chance to observe how experienced nurses applied their clinical reasoning.

Then, I would have a few minutes with my preceptor, where she would quiz me about how I would prioritize each patient or organize the tasks for the day.

Over my last rotation I lucked out, as not all preceptors paid us that much attention.

10:30 to 11:00 a.m.: Each hospital and floor has its own system and pace. In this unit, we would find a slight lull around this time – provided nothing unexpected happened. It gave me time for some fruit and a quick break.

11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.: The end of the shift was rarely as hectic as the early morning hours.

Usually, the last half an hour sees a lot of running around as well, as nurses get ready to hand over to the afternoon shift – but the new “COVID schedule” meant I was exempt from this.

1:30 p.m.: I would get home and immediately head for a long shower and a nap.

3:00 to 7:30 p.m

Depending on what was due the next day, I would spend these hours either working (paid work, either translating or editing) or preparing for the next days’ lectures. Coming to class having just read the chapter that we are about to examine made it significantly easier to follow along with the lecture.

In the weeks in which I was schedul for afternoon clinicals, I would try hard to be out of bed before 7:30 a.m. (and consistently failed). Then, I would either work or take care of household chores until lunchtime and leave for the hospital immediately after.

08:00 p.m

I tried my best to assign half an hour for stretching, an evening walk, or some sort of quiet time. Clinicals are physically demanding, and you will spend most of them on your feet. Because of this, I don’t even try to go running on my “clinic days,” but stretching or mindful breathing would prevent my legs from being sore the next day.

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