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“These people, you know, they’re homegrown,” Kaleigh says with a warm smile. “I’m big on that.”
That small-town pride runs deep in Kaleigh’s story. After excelling in high school and graduating at the top of her class with a 4.9 GPA, her path was guided not just by academics but by heart. Unlike the sprawling lecture halls of a four-year university, which she briefly attended, Kaleigh found her footing and her voice at a place that offered more than just coursework.
“I was looking for mentorship. That one-on-one, walk-beside-you kind of support,” she explains. “You don’t get that in big universities. If you do, it’s rare. You have to fight tooth and nail for it.”
At her LPN program, Kaleigh found exactly what she was looking for: intimate class sizes, devoted instructors, and a community that felt like home. She credits the strength of that program for easing the transition into the more demanding RN curriculum.
“You’d think going from LPN to RN would be harder,” she says. “But our professors overprepared us. Which, honestly, is never a bad thing.”
Professors like Miss Pigg and Miss Patrick weren’t just instructors. They were lifelines.
“Miss Pigg wasn’t only helping me through nursing school,” Kaleigh recalls. “She was guiding me through some pretty tough stuff in my personal life too. She made me feel like I was capable, like I could do anything.”
Those relationships shaped her education in a way no textbook ever could. “They never told us our dreams were too far-fetched. Never made us feel crazy for wanting more,” she says. “Miss Patrick, she made sure I didn’t lose my sparkle.”
For Kaleigh, nursing school was more than just a degree. “It was like climbing a mountain in the snow with no shoes,” she laughs. “You’ll make it eventually, but you’re going to lose some toes, some hair, and you’ll definitely be hungry.”
But she never climbed alone. She recalls early mornings with Amanda, her close friend from the program.
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