True and false. None of those things would actually make you an RN. The one thing that'll make you an RN is taking and passing the test that'll give you an RN license.
The things you've listed are the pathways to qualifying to take the test. Yes, that's splitting hairs, but the point is that you could earn a Bachelor's degree and then fail the test. My high school daugther and I have been visiting colleges, and I was surprised to learn that NO ONE is a nursing major Freshman / Sophomore years. Once the student has completed all those classes you've listed, they must apply to get into the nursing program. There's a test involved -- is it called TASK? I'm not sure I remember that correctly. And they must have a CNA license to get into the nursing program. It's harder than I expected.
Most of the nursing students attend a six-week summer school in which they earn their CNA license. My daughter's going to have a jump on that: She's doing it through the vocational classes here in our high school. She'll have a CNA 1 license before she has a high school diploma, and she's going to complete the CNA 2 license (not a big step past 1) during the summer. She hopes that by working part-time as a CNA during her Freshman /Sophomore year, she'll get a jump on the competition and be better qualified for a spot in the nursing program as a Junior. I also feel good about the idea of her having the hospital experience in high school; it'll give her a feel for whether this is what she really wants BEFORE college.
Also, I was shocked to hear that the schools in which she's interested only accept a small number of people into the program -- one school takes 40, another takes 50. I asked why, with nurses being in such high demand, they take so few, and the instructor explained that the hospital in their area can only support 100 student nurses (50 juniors, 50 seniors). They won't accept a student into their program if they aren't going to have a place for him or her to go for clinicals. It makes sense.