Jennifer Burbella sues school, A previous nursing understudy claims Misericordia University authorities in Dallas, Pa. damaged government inability laws after she fizzled a course — twice.
The intense adventure to get a nursing degree just mounted to Jennifer Burbella's now existing uneasiness and dejection, her lawyer point by point in a government claim recorded in the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
Burbella looked for treatment from the school's Counseling and Psychological Service Center in 2011, the suit fights.
Notwithstanding the anxiety of an overwhelming last, most decisive test, Burbella was left "separating and crying" on the grounds that she was not able to achieve her educator in a telephone call to demand handicap housing.
Burbella claims the school offered her a "diversion free environment," stretched out due date to finish the exam and the capacity to ask the educator inquiries amid the second endeavor, yet when it came down to the last, most decisive test, none of that happened.
She was so near to acquiring her nursing degree that Misericordia records Burbella as a 2014 undergrad of nursing being regarded on the school's website.Her suit names nursing educator Christina Tomkins at the heart of the protest, yet Misericordia President Thomas J. Botzman and the nursing division's executive, Cynthia Mailloux, is recorded too.
Despite the fact that the displeased understudy is looking for $75,000 in harms, WNEP-TV reports Burbella would rather retake the exam and this time, pass it.
Burbella no more goes to Misericordia, WNEP-TV reporte
The intense adventure to get a nursing degree just mounted to Jennifer Burbella's now existing uneasiness and dejection, her lawyer point by point in a government claim recorded in the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
Burbella looked for treatment from the school's Counseling and Psychological Service Center in 2011, the suit fights.
Notwithstanding the anxiety of an overwhelming last, most decisive test, Burbella was left "separating and crying" on the grounds that she was not able to achieve her educator in a telephone call to demand handicap housing.
Burbella claims the school offered her a "diversion free environment," stretched out due date to finish the exam and the capacity to ask the educator inquiries amid the second endeavor, yet when it came down to the last, most decisive test, none of that happened.
She was so near to acquiring her nursing degree that Misericordia records Burbella as a 2014 undergrad of nursing being regarded on the school's website.Her suit names nursing educator Christina Tomkins at the heart of the protest, yet Misericordia President Thomas J. Botzman and the nursing division's executive, Cynthia Mailloux, is recorded too.
Despite the fact that the displeased understudy is looking for $75,000 in harms, WNEP-TV reports Burbella would rather retake the exam and this time, pass it.
Burbella no more goes to Misericordia, WNEP-TV reporte
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