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Abstract

G raduation season is right around the corner. Are you ready to assume your responsibility? Every spring, thousands of us will take a big step forward.Wemay celebrate our own personal success by earning a BSN or finishing graduate school. We may celebrate our friends and colleagues who walk across the graduation stage after years of spending nights and weekends in class. For some of us, graduation will be bittersweet, marking the day our daughters and sons prepare to set out on their own academic journeys. With graduation comes a new set of responsibilities. This history of the graduation ceremony goes back centuries and has evolved over time. Likely beginning as an Islamic tradition, graduation historically symbolized that the student was ready to become the teacher. Back then, no distinction was made between the type or level of degree. Scholar, bachelor, master, and doctor were essentially interchangeable terms used to describe someone who had earned the right to share what he or she had learned. They had earned the right to teach. The many traditions of graduation are actually reflections of necessity. Those long robes we all wore when we got our diplomas do indeed reflect learning but maybe not the way you think. Ages ago, scholars (teachers) spent their days teaching. Teaching meant being indoors. Being indoors meant being inside the cold damp halls of the academy. Students often arrived poor and unprepared for the learning environment. However, the scholars had learned a thing or two; they had learned how to keep warm and dry by wearing long robes. Anyone could easily distinguish student from teacher by looking to see who was smart enough to wear robes. Hence, robes became a symbol that one had become educated enough to take on the role of teacher. As nurses, we donned our graduation robes and accepted our diplomas. When we did this, we became part of the fabric of history, and thereby, we agreed to become teachers. We willingly accepted the burden of responsibility to teach our craft. Soon, hospitals and clinics will be bustling with newly graduated nurses; are you ready to assume your responsibility and teach them your craft?
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让他们从你手中拿走鹅卵石。
毕业季马上就要到了。你准备好承担你的责任了吗?每年春天,我们成千上万的人都会向前迈出一大步。我们可以通过获得学士学位或完成研究生学业来庆祝我们自己的个人成功。我们可能会庆祝我们的朋友和同事,他们在经历了多年的夜以继日和周末的课堂学习后,终于跨上了毕业的舞台。对我们中的一些人来说,毕业将是苦乐参半的,标志着我们的女儿和儿子准备开始他们自己的学术之旅的一天。随着毕业而来的是一系列新的责任。毕业典礼的历史可以追溯到几个世纪前,并随着时间的推移而演变。毕业可能开始于伊斯兰传统,在历史上象征着学生准备成为老师。那时候,学位的类型和等级是没有区别的。学者(Scholar)、学士(bachelor)、硕士(master)和博士(doctor)基本上是可以互换使用的术语,用来描述那些有权分享自己所学知识的人。他们赢得了教书的权利。毕业典礼的许多传统实际上反映了必要性。我们拿到文凭时穿的长袍确实反映了学习,但可能不是你想的那样。很久以前,学者(教师)以教书为业。教学意味着待在室内。待在室内意味着待在学院寒冷潮湿的大厅里。学生们来到这里时往往穷困潦倒,对学习环境毫无准备。然而,学者们已经学到了一两件事;他们已经学会了如何穿着长袍来保持温暖和干燥。任何人只要看谁聪明到能穿长袍就能很容易地把学生和老师区分开来。因此,长袍成为一种象征,表明一个人已经受过足够的教育,可以承担教师的角色。作为护士,我们穿上了毕业礼服,接受了毕业证书。当我们这样做的时候,我们成为了历史的一部分,因此,我们同意成为老师。我们心甘情愿地承担起传授手艺的责任。很快,医院和诊所将挤满了刚毕业的护士;你准备好承担你的责任并教他们你的手艺了吗?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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