I agree with you, but I understand why. Most nurses don’t go to highly rank d 4 yr colleges. In my experience, most of the nurses like you work the floor for a short time then move on to highly level practitioner degrees such as NP, CRNA, CNS, DNP... Many of the “regular” nurses have associate degrees. There also seems to be a very large draw to nursing for single moms and/or divorced women and those needing to find a new work where they can go to school for a relatively short time for (2 yr associate) and have a guaranteed job making decent money immediately following graduation. Nurses isn’t their calling, it is just the easiest way to make a wage high enough to support a family with relatively minimal yrs commented to school and low risk of not finding a job. |
| Most have graduate degrees now. |
Agreed. Someone making $200,000 to $500,000 a year (depending on specialty) is most definitely NOT blue collar! |
Seriously. Nurses are white color. My dad was blue color and the best man I’ve ever known. |
| Doctors, with all their education and knowledge, are white color. |
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White collar.
Nursing now is much different than nursing 30 years ago, if you are an RN. CNAs are blue color, and require much less education, but have a hard job. |
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RNs are blue collar if working a job that only requires as associates degree, even if they happen to have a bachelors.
If they go on to get a masters or higher and work in a position requiring that higher ed, then they are white collar |
pink |