---
title: "Tips for New Nurses: What I Wish I Knew Before Starting My Nursing Career"
url: "https://arizonacollege.edu/blog/what-i-wish-i-knew-before-starting-my-nursing-career/"
type: post
date_published: 2023-12-14
date_modified: 2025-08-01
schema:
  @type: Article
language: en-US
word_count: 1559
reading_time: 8 min
canonical: "https://arizonacollege.edu/blog/what-i-wish-i-knew-before-starting-my-nursing-career/"
featured_image: "https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-School-Faculty-and-Student-e1635459835199.jpg"
categories:
  - Nursing Careers
---

# Tips for New Nurses: What I Wish I Knew Before Starting My Nursing Career

![Nursing School Students during Nursing Courses](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-School-Faculty-and-Student-e1635459835199.jpg)

Committing to a nursing career is a life-changing decision. I am now seven years
into my nursing career and never looked back. During this time, I have worked in
women’s health, family medicine, sleep, and infusion. I love being a nurse and
being a part of this rewarding profession!

Starting out as a new nurse can be overwhelming and it would have been helpful
to know what to expect. In this blog post I will share what I wish I knew before
starting my nursing career, offer practical tips for soon-to-be new nurses, and
discuss the rewarding experiences I had as a new nurse.

## From Graduation to Practice: My First Steps as a Nurse

![Nursing Degree Program Faculty and Students in lab](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-Degree-Program-Faculty-and-Students-in-Lab-2.jpg)![Nursing Degree Program Faculty and Students in lab](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-Degree-Program-Faculty-and-Students-in-Lab-2.jpg)
After earning my BSN, I embarked on my first position at an outpatient women’s
health office as an RN. I was thrilled to finally finish school, pass the NCLEX,
and begin working as an RN. At my first job, I provided family planning
services, contraceptive counseling, and preventive women’s health services. I
also played a large role in triaging all patient calls and lab results. Looking
back, my early success was due to joining a group of nurses, physicians, and
support staff that were encouraging and open to training a new graduate nurse.

To nursing students reading this, my biggest tip for the new nurse transition
period is to find an employer that is supportive of new graduate nurses. A
positive work culture that is new-nurse friendly will go a long way in ensuring
you have a good experience as you transition to practice.

## The Reality of Early Career Nursing

While nursing school prepares you with the essential preparation to be a safe
bedside nurse, it is impossible to really understand what it is like to be a
nurse until you start working. I realized quickly that I had more to learn about
nursing and medicine when I started my first job. Since I began my career in a
specialty setting, there were lab tests, medications, and procedures I had never
heard of, so there was a large learning curve, fresh out of school.

Feeling overwhelmed is inevitably going to be part of the process. Remember that
the “growing pains” get easier and that they will help you develop into a
competent nurse in the end.

## Essential Tips for Early Career Nurses

Based on my personal experience, here are a few other tips for future nurses I
would like to share, outlined below:

- **Interview your Employer.** As much as your interviewer will be learning
  about you while you look for your first RN position, look at these
  conversations as opportunities for you to “interview” your employer. Make sure
  the first nursing position you take out of school will be a good fit. Come
  prepared to your interview with questions about orientation, training, and
  support for new graduate nurses. You can also ask to visit the unit you may be
  working on to get a feel for it and to speak with some of the current staff.
- **Don’t Forget Your Critical Thinking.** In nursing school, critical thinking
  and making sound clinical judgments is highly emphasized, and for good reason!
  As a nurse, you will constantly be making clinical decisions that directly
  impact patient outcomes. While it may be challenging to apply this as a new
  nurse, this skill is incredibly important to embody in your everyday work as a
  nurse to ensure patient safety, starting on day one.
- **Make Sure You Practice Self-Care.** Starting a nursing career is
  challenging. Nurses these days are expected to take on more and more given the
  staffing shortages many institutions are facing. Stress and burnout are an
  unfortunate reality within the nursing profession but can be managed with
  self-care. Self-care means taking the time to focus on your own wellbeing,
  physically, emotionally and mentally. Focusing on self-care reduces stress and
  can improve the quality of care you provide to patients.
- **Consider a Nurse Residency Program.** Nurse residency programs are offered
  by many healthcare organizations. These “transition to practice” programs are
  designed to help new nurses at the beginning of their careers and can be
  anywhere from nine to twelve months in length. While individual residency
  programs vary, they all offer structured precepted orientation periods, extra
  training geared towards new nurses, and strategies to help transition new
  nurses to bedside care. A number of these programs are also accredited by
  agencies such as The American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) or the
  Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE). I would encourage any
  soon-to-be nurse to look into these types of programs as a first job out of
  school.

## Nursing School Prepares You For a Rewarding Career!

Thankfully, there were many things I found immediately rewarding as I started my
nursing career. The content I learned in courses such as health assessment,
pharmacology, and pathophysiology did come together and “click” as I began to
take care of patients. When you are sitting in class, it can be difficult to see
the big picture. Attending a high-quality nursing program that gives you a
strong foundation that really does set you up for success.

I also enjoyed the immediate satisfaction that came from helping others and
answering questions regarding their health, treatment plans, and medications.
Knowing that I am making a difference in patients’ lives and their families is
incredibly gratifying. As a brand-new nurse when things got tough, I reminded
myself how fulfilling is to help others in their time of need.

I was also incredibly proud from my first day of work to join a profession that
is known as the most trusted and ethical profession by Americans. This
recognition is something I am still honored to carry with me today as a nurse.

Lastly, even from day one of my nursing career, I was excited by the prospect of
my future career as an RN and how this would unfold. Nursing is a dynamic field
with endless opportunities for specialization and advanced practice. I knew that
my path forward would be exciting and that I chose the best career possible!

## Why the Right Educational Foundation is Crucial

![Nursing School RN Students and Faculty](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/BSN-Nursing-Program-RN-Students-and-Faculty.jpg)![Nursing School RN Students and Faculty](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/BSN-Nursing-Program-RN-Students-and-Faculty.jpg)
The early days after starting a nursing career are challenging yet rewarding.
Your choice of nursing program sets the foundation for your nursing career, so
choosing a high-quality program is a crucial first step in becoming a nurse.
Arizona College of Nursing is an excellent choice for nursing school given its
CCNE-accreditation, assistance with NCLEX preparation, and emphasis on high
quality clinical experiences and student support.

Are you ready to start your nursing education? You can learn more about Arizona
College of Nursing’s 3-year BSN program
[here](https://www.arizonacollege.edu/accredited-bsn-program/).

---

### Author Bio

_Tana Bao is an experienced advanced practice registered nurse. She earned her BSN from The University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2016 and her MSN from Thomas Jefferson University in 2019. She is board certified to practice as a family nurse practitioner with both The American Academy of Nurse Practitioners (NP-C) and The American Nurses Credentialing Center (FNP-BC). Clinically, she has worked in various medical settings including women’s health, sleep medicine, infusion, and primary care. She now also writes professionally as a health content writer and has also completed a post master’s graduate certificate in nursing education. _

#### 󠀁_Citations_󠁿

ANA. Americans Continue to Rank Nurses Most Honest and Ethical Professionals.
[https://www.nursingworld.org/news/news-releases/2022-news-releases/americans-continue-to-rank-nurses-most-honest-and-ethical-professionals/](https://www.nursingworld.org/news/news-releases/2022-news-releases/americans-continue-to-rank-nurses-most-honest-and-ethical-professionals/)

ANA. Nurse Staffing Crisis.
[https://www.nursingworld.org/practice-policy/nurse-staffing/nurse-staffing-crisis/](https://www.nursingworld.org/practice-policy/nurse-staffing/nurse-staffing-crisis/)

ANA. What is Nurse Burnout? How to Prevent It.
[https://www.nursingworld.org/practice-policy/work-environment/health-safety/nurse-burnout-and-how-to-prevent-it/#:\~:text=Very.,care%20systems%20in%20the%20U.S.](https://www.nursingworld.org/practice-policy/work-environment/health-safety/nurse-burnout-and-how-to-prevent-it/#:~:text=Very.,care%20systems%20in%20the%20U.S.)

ANCC. Practice Transition Accreditation Program® (PTAP).
[https://www.nursingworld.org/organizational-programs/accreditation/ptap/](https://www.nursingworld.org/organizational-programs/accreditation/ptap/)

CCNE. Procedures for Accreditation of Entry-to-Practice Nurse Residency
Programs.
[https://www.aacnnursing.org/Portals/0/PDFs/CCNE/Procedures-Residency.pdf](https://www.aacnnursing.org/Portals/0/PDFs/CCNE/Procedures-Residency.pdf)

NCSBN. Transition to Practice Study Results.
[https://www.ncsbn.org/nursing-regulation/practice/transition-to-practice/study-results.page](https://www.ncsbn.org/nursing-regulation/practice/transition-to-practice/study-results.page)

NCSBN. Transition to Practice.
[https://www.ncsbn.org/nursing-regulation/practice/transition-to-practice.page](https://www.ncsbn.org/nursing-regulation/practice/transition-to-practice.page)

**Categories:** Nursing Careers