Heartland College holds junior nurse academy on Lincoln campus

[July 11, 2025]  On Wednesday July 9th, the Lincoln campus of Heartland Community College held a junior nurse academy. This free 3-hour course was held from 1:00 p.m. until 4:00. Kids in 6th, 7th, or 8th grade were encouraged to attend, but their parents did have to register them due to limited availability.

The instructor was Dameron Beverly, who is a nurse herself. Her accolades and titles include a Master of Science in Nursing, a Registered Nurse, and Certified Academic Novice Nurse Educator (MSN, RN, and CNEn).

Beverly started off her class by asking the students a few basic questions about nursing and their knowledge. She also told the students about the skills they were going to be learning about and practicing.

The class started out, as Beverly informed the students, with a lot of discussion and a couple of videos. Beverly informed the students that understanding the basics about health was important before they got up and practiced the skills. Beverly presented a slideshow on nursing and what levels of nursing the students can achieve, from a nursing assistant all the way to a doctor of nursing. The students also learned the different places that nurses can work, from hospitals to the military.

After this introduction, Beverly had the students use stethoscopes on themselves and watch a video on lung sounds and what lungs with different health problems sound like. She also had the students use a pulse oximeter, or pulse ox, on themselves, measuring things like their pulse rate and blood-oxygen level. After this, Beverly showed the students how to use an at-home blood pressure cuff.

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While teaching the students these practical skills, Beverly also supplemented the activities with valuable knowledge. When the students were using the stethoscope, she talked about where the lungs are in the chest and the different places doctors use stethoscopes on people. When the students used the pulse ox, Beverly taught the students about what level a person’s oxygen saturation should be, as well as the reason ambulances and hospitals have oxygen to administer to patients whose levels are low. When showing the students how to use the blood pressure cuff, she talked about what a good blood pressure level is, as well as the dangers of having your blood pressure at a level that is too high or too low.

For all of the great information Beverly shared with the students, they had an equal number of questions to follow. Beverly was very responsive to their questions, answering them honestly, and praising students for their skills at paying attention and asking good questions.

Some of the other skills Beverly taught the students included CPR for adults and babies, what an AED is and how to use it, the Heimlich maneuver and what to do when someone is choking, and how to properly insert an IV. Overall, Beverly did an excellent job of instructing the young people present, and they seemed to genuinely enjoy interacting with and learning about what she had to teach.

[Matt Boutcher]

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