I only went to class about one hour per week my last semester....about 10 of us out of my graduating nursing class did this...By the end, you either have it or you don't...
They changed my only class on Mondays to an on-line class, and it was a review class of everything we had covered the past three semesters. As we clicked through the screens, we got credit. At the end of the screens, you had a test. I sat and clicked without reading about 30 minutes a day for two weeks, took the test and made a 92, and I was done for the semester.
I had two classes on Wednesday and Friday at 10am and 1:00pm, Managment in Nursing and Pediatrics. We had a test in Management every Wednesday, and a test in Pediatrics every Friday. I would go take my Management test, then say, "I'm so pooped from that that I can't face Peds today." On Fridays, I would skip Management to study for my Peds test later that afternoon. We got to leave as soon as we turned our tests in, so I spent about 15 minutes in each class per week. Our professors didn't take attendance the last semester, they were of the attitude that we were seniors, and if we skipped class and failed it was our own fault.
Tuesdays and Thursdays were left open for us to do our required clinical observation hours and preceptorships. I didn't play...I signed up for 12 hour shifts on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday for the first three and a half weeks of school, and finished VERY quickly, leaving those three days open the rest of the semester. I ended up working about 30 hours a week, I had PLENTY of time to get my senioritis-party-like-a-rock-star out, and sustain a relationship. Good times.
Before you freak out...I made a 4.0 that semester, graduated, and got a great job... You learn everything you REALLY need to know about nursing when you start working and can actually get your hands on patients with your preceptor's guidance. We weren't allowed to do anything invasive in school, and had no real immersion or continuity.