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I went to a cheap community college to get my associates in nursing to start working while getting the BSN.
Then, just before I finished my prerequisites to apply to their nursing school they lost their accreditation after lying about it at first. We found out from the bon. I'm now in a super expensive program because no one would take my schools credits and it would have added another several years of school to graduate. Sucks. Good luck with your schooling. |
| Agree with previous posters about going the cheapest route possible. Once you get your license nobody cares where you went to school. I know a lot of nurses swimming in student loans. Don't be one of them. |
As a new RN grad (career change) most hospitals won't even look at ADN grads. Obviously it depends where you are but getting a hospital job as a new grad is competitive enough just for BSN grads. Sure, you can start in a nursing home, but again, depending where you are it can be tough to get into a hospital later. The ADN route isnt terrible but I'd make sure that a BSN program would not work out at all. |
Where do new grads start at $28/hr before differential! I want to apply there!! I've heard a measly $23/hr for new grads....
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There is no nursing shortage. |
NP but in my hospital we're so desperate for nurses that we give sign on bonuses too. |
I work for a local hospital in the IT department. Our hospital is so desperate for nurses that HR is offering $10k bonuses if you refer someone and they last one year. $1000 just for getting hired. |
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The whole "nursing shortage" is completely dependent on area. My friends in Florida are basically being thrown money to work in a hospital. My friends who live in Boston aren't getting interviews unless they have a BSN. I live in NH and am a new grad. There are a good number of job openings but it is still pretty competitive. If OP lives in a competitive area (just look at the Job postings and see if it says BSN required or required by X date) she is likely to have a difficult time getting a job. If those postings only say BSN preferred, she may still get a job with an ADN, but having a BSN will put her way ahead in terms of likelihood of getting a hospital job.
If OP has a bachelor's degree her best bet is to do an accelerated BSN program. |