My nursing school professors:
Advisor/ psych instructor: Unknown (ISTJ? Maybe INTJ). Very competent, good at what she did. Extremely tough on the paperwork though. She graded my assignments and liked a lot of communication, meetings, and email. When you talked to her it was like she was looking right directly through you to the depths of your soul. She would just stare silently and nod, (implying you to talk more, but you didn't really want to give her more information than you had to.) Made some accurate statements about me that I didn't really want to hear at the time- (ended up being true and helpful) and really truly believed in me and my potential, and therefore ended up being pretty inspiring . Very encouraging for me to go on to much higher learning, masters and doctorate. showed me some schools that I may want to consider and told me what she wished I would consider next.
ESFP: I found her very encouraging and fun. Excellent in clinical nursing. I liked her lectures because they weren't too depthy and boring. They were just fun stories and general information so I could figure out more myself. She bought me a watch for Christmas one year. Some people said they really clashed with her because she had a short temper and was easily frustrated with high anxiety students. Probably most helpful in learning care plans.
INFJ nun (I thought it was funny that we had to title her Doctor Sister, like a screen name): Really lofty about the nursing profession in lectures. I never really listened. It sounded like she was always making a presidential speech. She was very sweet, but I never had her for clinicals or got to know her well.
Unknown type:- Didn't have her much, she was sooooo incredibly general that I actually skipped her lectures for studying most of the time, or just quickly ran down through them. I literally got nothing that I didn't already know from her.
ENTP: Had her for clinical. Probably my favorite professor. Her lectures were sooo difficult and in depth that sometimes I felt like I was in a harder science or medical school. She taught all the hard stuff like neurology and strange pathologies. This lady should have been a physician. My favorite part about her was that I learned, I mean really learned to be a nurse from her teachings. She used to spend time with students by themselves. I remember her asking me really difficult open ended questions about patient conditions. I always asked her for difficult ICU type cases so normally had the hardest patient on the floor with her. Lots of "whys?" Forcing me to talk a lot while she just smiled and nodded with a sparkley "i'm such a good teacher" look in her eye. She was really loopy and quirky at times and had this bizarre sense of humor. One day she left me with an ornery doctor to fend for myself and told me I could handle it and started laughing maniacally. A little too much focus on the fecal disimpactions at times and worded them graphically enough so that I wondered if she was secretly joking. She had some hardcore student followers such as myself, but others just hated her. She was nasty at times to students she didn't like, (I remember one very non-sciency holistic INFJ in particular) and I witnessed it and it was awful. Lots of stories. I got written recommendations from her out of school.
A really nasty esxj adjunct maternity instuctor: She also had her faves, and in this case, I was NOT one of them. Our meetings were sooo painful, she knew I really wasn't into the topic and seriously wanted to fail me out for being "too last minute"- "you think you can slide through just being bright" thought I was going to get sick one day and miss a beat and fail, (which was ludacris.) Had no faith. Used to talk on her cell a lot. Really detail oriented and got angry if you missed the most minor thing. (I guess you have to be that way around babies, but she was really harsh and condescending.) I used to sit in the corner with this one nerdy game loving INTP male from the class and we bonded because she hated us both.
exfx clinical adjunct: By now it was my last semester. She was very encouraging of all of us. Didn't really guide us too much, but was there if we needed her. Always kind, discussions were easy. Always there to lend an ear if we were having trouble.
enfp adjunct: Similar to the above, very motivating "you can do it!" type. Lectures were fluff balls.
isfj adjunct: Hovery, used to tell me to slow down a lot which annoyed me but helped. Be like, "wait, tell me what you are thinking about before you do that, have you considered everything?" And I used to have to go on these long soliloquys about everything I did. But I didn't have her too much.
esfj(?) lecturer: Usually did cardiac stuff, med/surge. Practical, I learned a lot from her lectures because they were general again and didn't get bogged down in too heavy detail but yet gave us what we needed to know for actual practice. Allowed some breathing room, a lot of people thought she was too basic. I thought it helped, getting back to the basics, a lot of stuff you would need to know for a typical day in the hospital without getting bogged down in a lot of tangents or heavy duty stuff.