FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Transcription
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
NURSING and MIDWIFERY PROGRAMMES FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS GENERAL INFORMATION How many places do you have? All of our places are commissioned by Health Education England on an annual basis. Over previous years we have had up to 260 Adult Nursing places, up to 70 Mental Health places and no more than 20 places for Child Nursing and Midwifery. What programmes do you offer for 2015/2016? We will be recruiting for the following undergraduate programmes (application through UCAS): BSc Adult Nursing (September 2015 & March 2016) BSc Mental Health Nursing (September 2015 & March 2016) BSc Child Nursing (September 2015) BA Midwifery (September 2015) What is the duration of programmes? 3 years for undergraduate programmes. BURSARIES All students who meet relevant criteria will have their fees paid by the NHS. A bursary calculator is available at www.nhsbsa.nhs.uk to give you an estimate. A recent review of student bursaries has been undertaken and from September 2012, all students have access to the same scheme, irrelevant of their programme of study. You can gain further advice from our Student Advice team regarding any financial issues, including Bursaries and applying for student loans by emailing [email protected] or calling 0151-904 6053 / 6055 . Would I be a Registered Nurse / Midwife after completion of any of these programmes? Yes, upon successful completion, you will become a Registered Nurse or Midwife, providing you have completed the required hours. Once you have completed, the NMC will contact you regarding your Registered Status. For those wishing to enter employment in the NHS, Registered Nurses and Registered Midwives enter at band 5 within Agenda for Change. Current pay for band 5 is between £21,478 and £27,901 per annum. For more information on pay and careers within the NHS, please visit: www.nhscareers.nhs.uk I am already a Registered Nurse but wish to train in a different Branch / as a Midwife, can I do this? Not easily. You can only receive pre-registration funding once, however, you may be able to persuade an NHS employer to pay for you to do this. I trained for one year and due to personal reasons had to give up but still wish to continue my training, is this possible? Yes, if you successfully completed your first year you may be able to transfer or re-start with us. External transfers will need to apply directly through UCAS (and put year of entry as ‘2’) but your personal statement must state that you are wishing to transfer. If invited to interview you will need to provide a transcript of training, attendance record, and a reference from your previous personal tutor as well as other information. Is the course split into Theory and Practice? Yes, there is a requirement that all courses leading to Registered Nurse or Registered Midwife must be split into 50% theory and 50% practice. The requirements for undergraduate and postgraduate programmes are different and you should check the individual factfile for further information. When will my holidays be? Nursing and Midwifery courses do not follow the standard academic calendar and as a student, you will be entitled to 7 weeks holiday per year, set in advance. Due to the amount of hours that must be completed to register, students are unable to take any additional holidays. We try to give holiday dates as far as possible in advance to allow students to plan holidays. PLACEMENTS How are placements allocated? Each student studying on Adult / Mental Health / Child Nursing are allocated a Hospital Trust upon commencement and the majority of clinical based placements will be within this Trust. Other placements may include nursing and old peoples homes. Although it can’t be guaranteed, the Placement Learning Support Unit try to place students with a Trust close to their term time address. Due to the small amount of Midwifery placements, the same cannot be guaranteed for these students. How will I travel to my placements? If you are in student accommodation reserved for Nurses and Midwives (Marybone III), you are well situated to reach your placements by public transport. You will be only a 5-minute walk away from the local rail network and the main city centre bus stops. Additionally, providing the cost of your journey is greater than the cost of your normal travel to university, you . Faculty of Education, Health & Community Visit us at: www.ljmu.ac.uk/health Contact us: (0151) 231-5090 [email protected] will have the difference reimbursed each month. We try to ensure that students do not travel in excess of one hour to placement. Who will train me when I am on placement? You will be placed with a qualified midwife or nurse mentor who will teach you clinical skills throughout your placement. You will have a different mentor on each placement. Will I work shifts? Yes, there is a requirement for students to work the full range of shifts as would be expected once qualified, this means nightshifts and weekend working as well as normal early and late shifts. The University does ensure however that students are not taken advantage of and used to ‘fill in the gaps’ on shifts. Students are supernumerary to the staffing structure in place and for the majority of the time you will work shifts the same as that of your mentor. Shifts are set in the practice area and are not set by the University. Midwifery students need to provide antenatal care to 100 women and postnatal care to 100 women and their babies they also need to complete 40 normal births and attend 10 complicated births, there may be times therefore that you will work beyond the hours of your shift to enable you to become clinically competent. APPLICATIONS & SELECTION PROCESSES (including mature applicants, convictions and medicals) How do I apply? Applications must be made online through UCAS www.ucas.ac.uk for undergraduate programmes and through JMU’s online application for postgraduate courses. For those applying through UCAS, you can apply for up to 5 courses on one application and UCAS forwards it to the relevant universities. When you apply, you will become registered to use UCAS Track, this is an online tracking system to enable you to find out the status of your applications. Universities will update the system at various stages, i.e. if your application is rejected, if you are invited to interview or you are made an offer - and is your first port of call in finding out what is happening to your application. UCAS Track also allows you to accept or decline your offers online and is the only accepted way of doing so. I want to apply for nursing / midwifery but am apprehensive as a mature student of being at university with school leavers, would this be the case? Our age range of new students onto all of our Nursing and Midwifery programmes is quite broad in each new intake. In previous years the youngest student has been 17 while the oldest has been 55. We have the highest number of undergraduate mature students than any other Faculty in the University. We appreciate the contributions that both mature and younger students alike can make, as normally students will have different perspectives and outlooks and we regard this as a valuable learning tool. Are there any age restrictions? There is no minimum or maximum age limit to apply, however, we would expect you to be able to work after completion of the programme, before reaching the normal retirement age of NHS nurses. What is the qualification criteria? Criteria for each programme is different, however, there is detailed information on each course factfile which are available on the LJMU website www.ljmu.ac.uk/courses. Is there any other criteria? Yes, any offer will be made subject to meeting the residency criteria set by NHS Student Grants Unit, further detailed information regarding this criteria is available at www.nhsbsa.nhs.uk Additionally, all applicants will be required to undertake a satisfactory medical examination and DBS Enhanced Disclosure and must agree, as a requirement of completing a professional award, to the Faculty transferring data to third parties regarding progress, attendance, placements etc. If you are made an offer then you will be contacted separately in relation to DBS and medical clearance. I don’t have English or Maths GCSE at grade C or above, do you accept equivalents? At present, we accept other Level 2 qualifications for Mental Health Nursing to ensure that you still meet the Nursing and Midwifery Council minimum standards. (these must be held at the point of application). However, for Adult and Child Nursing plus Midwifery you must hold GCSE maths and English grade C+ at the point of application unless an equivalent has been awarded through an Access course. For further details please refer to individual course factfiles which contain detailed qualification criteria. How do you make decisions on applications? We will shortlist your application, initially from current qualifications and actual or predicted grades, if you meet our qualification criteria we will then look at your personal statement and reference. What is the interview process? Each programme’s selection process will vary but details will be conveyed to you via UCAS Track should you be selected. What support is there for students with dyslexia sitting an essay and what do I need to do if I have other support requirements to attend my interview? Providing you inform us in advance, we can make provisions to ensure that your requirements are considered. For example, students with dyslexia may be given additional time or IT support, or, for students with hearing difficulties, we may ensure there is a signer available for your interview. How do I find out if I have been invited to interview? Undergraduate applicants will receive notification through UCAS Track. You should ensure that you check your Track account and emails regularly as it is not always possible for us to rearrange interviews due to the volume of applicants we invite per course. If you don’t attend and have not informed us, your application will be withdrawn via UCAS. Faculty of Education, Health & Community Visit us at: www.ljmu.ac.uk/health Contact us: (0151) 231-5090 [email protected] When will I be informed of the decision? The UCAS Code of Practice means that we have to give all ontime applicants equal consideration (applications received by 15th January), therefore, due to the high volume of applications and the relatively small amount of places available, you may not receive a decision until we have had an opportunity to interview all applicants. I have a medical condition, will I still be able to study Nursing / Midwifery? The competence standards for nursing and midwifery are set by the Department of Health and the Nursing and Midwifery Council. The University Occupational Health Service undertakes health screening for all healthcare students in accordance with current guidance from these regulatory bodies. BSc Adult Nursing This health screening includes assessment of any medical conditions and any mental or physical impairments which are relevant to the core competencies. Adjustments to the training course, which are needed on medical grounds, are possible in most circumstances. There are very few medical conditions or functional impairments which would prevent a student from training altogether. Further information can be obtained from the Nursing and Midwifery Council, Department of Health and the Occupational Health Service. We will start to make offers Dec 2014/Jan 2015 once we have received our commissioned numbers from the Strategic Health Authority. A number of offers will then be made following each interview day. BSc Mental Health Nursing Offers will be made after every few interview dates. This will be end of January, February and March 2015. BA Midwifery Offers will be made once all interviews have finished. We aim to have all decisions made by mid-April 2015. I have been informed by UCAS Track / email that I have been rejected, can I find out why? Your rejection decision will give you basic information, e.g. that you have been rejected for qualification purposes. Please check the criteria on our website before requesting further feedback if you feel you have been rejected but meet the criteria. We request that applicants email us for requests for feedback as soon as possible after you have received the decision. The email address to use is: [email protected] . After rejection, can I apply again? Yes, you can apply again in the following application cycle. We will not reconsider applicants in the same year. I have a criminal conviction, will that go against me? It will depend on the circumstances. If you are successful at interview, you will be sent a declaration form asking you to follow the Faculty’s internal processes should you have any bind-over orders, prior or current investigations by the police or employer / suspension by an employer or regulatory body / reprimands or final warnings. The information you provide will be treated confidentially and considered by a panel of senior academic and NHS staff. If you fail to provide this information and it is then discovered that you have not declared something to us, your place will be withdrawn. Unfortunately we are unable to provide advice regarding individual circumstances. LEARNING SUPPORT I have a disability, what support will JMU provide? If we are aware of your disability, i.e. you have identified it on your UCAS form, we will let our Welfare Disability Team know once you have accepted an offer from us. The Faculty Inclusion and Diversity Officer will also contact you directly. If you have not informed UCAS of a disability please contact us so that we may record this information and inform the relevant parties. For more information on the support that can be provided, please visit the Disability Advice Team pages at http://www.ljmu.ac.uk/disability What support will I receive when I am at university and on placement? At commencement you will be allocated a personal tutor, who you will have meetings with a few times a year, or ad-hoc if the need arises. It is with this tutor that you can discuss any issues you may have. Each module you study has a module leader who will provide guidance and support throughout your modular learning. Some modules are theory only, but some are theory with a practice element. Whilst on placement you will be allocated a qualified mentor and will be visited by an academic at least once on each placement to ensure that you are not experiencing difficulties. In addition to this, the Faculty has a Student Mentorship programme and all new starters will be given details of this at commencement to enable them to gain support from other students on similar courses. There are a number of social networking sites that can facilitate meeting students before the course begins. These include LJMU twitter and a Facebook site just for student nurses called Preppies. Will I need to buy anything for the course? Students are advised to purchase a pair of comfortable black leather, flat shoes with a filled front. A fob watch will be needed for placement and black pens and a notebook. Course Factfiles Our website has detailed factfiles for all of the courses mentioned in this document. Visit www.ljmu.ac.uk/courses and choose either the undergraduate or postgraduate link to find the course of your choice. Faculty of Education, Health & Community Visit us at: www.ljmu.ac.uk/health Contact us: (0151) 231-5090 [email protected]