Here are the options.....help me decide
Option #1 stay at the school I'm taking pre-reqs at for my ADN (2 year associates rn)... done in summer of 08
pro's- 2 year rn program, high success rate in state exam
pre-reqs and co-reqs will be mostly completed..2 left other than nursing classes
con's- might not get in this year- 50% of applicants get in, due to space/vs applicants, they really pull the 3.9/4.0 pre-req students and those with prior medical backgrounds before everyone else...I MIGHT have a 3.9 when we're done with pre-reqs but not sure...
If I dont get in this year, I'm done with pre-reqs and have nothing more to take, unless I take pre-reqs for the BSN which I would rather not...
If i dont get in, that means, student loans become due...instead of 3 years from now.
I'm an outofstate student at this school, using the new england regional tuition charges..still more than a state resident
Must take a NLN exam, and score very high on this to add to my chances of getting accepted....really dont have time to study algebra and chemistry, when I have a/p that sucks up my life (and the dis!)
Option #2 apply to another school, for a 10 month LPN program - done in Summer 07
pro's- these pre-reqs this year, will put me ahead of the majority of other applicants, as they are co-reqs at this school, (as long as my gpa stays where it is LOL)
because of this, I would only have the actual clinical nursing left to do, where you spend the majority of time on a floor, not the support classes...this will drop about 9 hours of class time off each week, and about 25 hours of studying off...leaving about 60 hours total of class and study
done in 10 months, with only an LPN....could work at a hospital with tuition reimbursement for furthering onto my lpn-rn transition...
in state for this school, tuition is less per credit
VERY small nursing class, like 18 because this is a technical schools off-campus branch...
cons- lpn vs rn..
Now, both of these scenario's in the end- I will owe the same amount. If I go straight to RN or get my lpn, then do the lpn-rn it will cost me the same amount....this is without taking into consideration any tuition reimbursement...either way, I will owe the same amount when done.
Travel to both schools is the same distance, just different directions....
I dunno I dunno I dunno..........part of me is thinking I'll only be broke till summer of 07 if I go lpn, but then I think of the difference in hourly rate and ugh I dunno
Thoughts?
Brandy
Option #1 stay at the school I'm taking pre-reqs at for my ADN (2 year associates rn)... done in summer of 08
pro's- 2 year rn program, high success rate in state exam
pre-reqs and co-reqs will be mostly completed..2 left other than nursing classes
con's- might not get in this year- 50% of applicants get in, due to space/vs applicants, they really pull the 3.9/4.0 pre-req students and those with prior medical backgrounds before everyone else...I MIGHT have a 3.9 when we're done with pre-reqs but not sure...
If I dont get in this year, I'm done with pre-reqs and have nothing more to take, unless I take pre-reqs for the BSN which I would rather not...
If i dont get in, that means, student loans become due...instead of 3 years from now.
I'm an outofstate student at this school, using the new england regional tuition charges..still more than a state resident
Must take a NLN exam, and score very high on this to add to my chances of getting accepted....really dont have time to study algebra and chemistry, when I have a/p that sucks up my life (and the dis!)
Option #2 apply to another school, for a 10 month LPN program - done in Summer 07
pro's- these pre-reqs this year, will put me ahead of the majority of other applicants, as they are co-reqs at this school, (as long as my gpa stays where it is LOL)
because of this, I would only have the actual clinical nursing left to do, where you spend the majority of time on a floor, not the support classes...this will drop about 9 hours of class time off each week, and about 25 hours of studying off...leaving about 60 hours total of class and study
done in 10 months, with only an LPN....could work at a hospital with tuition reimbursement for furthering onto my lpn-rn transition...
in state for this school, tuition is less per credit
VERY small nursing class, like 18 because this is a technical schools off-campus branch...
cons- lpn vs rn..
Now, both of these scenario's in the end- I will owe the same amount. If I go straight to RN or get my lpn, then do the lpn-rn it will cost me the same amount....this is without taking into consideration any tuition reimbursement...either way, I will owe the same amount when done.
Travel to both schools is the same distance, just different directions....
I dunno I dunno I dunno..........part of me is thinking I'll only be broke till summer of 07 if I go lpn, but then I think of the difference in hourly rate and ugh I dunno
Thoughts?
Brandy

I would not stop at a LPN....never been my goal to be stuck in geriatrics (which is what 99% of lpns here are)...
