Maricopa Waiting List / Placement / Timestamps 2010+

U.S.A. Arizona

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Hey everyone, I wanted to start a place for people to post and repost about waitlist times, placement runs, and their timestamps.

It is very hard searching for all the information and maybe people will access this thread and keep it updated with information so we all can get some idea on where we stand in line for Maricopa Nursing Placement.

As for me I have a

6/11/10 8:01:32 Timestamp. The placement just ran on March 6th,2012 and I was not placed. On the application website it says that the placement did NOT reach the June timestamps. This will mark 5 semesters that I was not placed (was expecting a 3 semester wait)

I am curious how far the placement ran. If people that were placed during the last placement run (3/6/12) come across this thread and would be willing to post their timestamp and what school choice number (1 through 5) they were placed in that would give an indicator how far away it is.

With almost 2500 people still on the waiting list it looks like it can be a 4-5 year wait for people just now getting on it. :(

Look forward to chatting with all of you and good luck.

Yikes! I like to think of myself as computer and internet savvy but have a hard time finding info I'm looking for about the maricopa nursing program lol can you post a link for that schedule? I'd love to see it! And again, please come back in the spring and give some feedback on how much of it is hybrid if any and how difficult you think it is if it turns out to be that way! Either way, good luck next semester! It will be a hard but fun journey I'm sure :)

I completely agree with ya!! In the event it blocks the website, once you're on GCC, go to the search bar and put in Nursing and the 5th ink down that says Welcome Nursing Student has all the information, #7 is the proposed schdeule for class and clinical for fall 2014 :up:

Welcome Nursing Student | Glendale Community College

Thank you for the link! That's really helpful for me :)

Specializes in Neuro, Telemetry.

I don't remember if banner still has partnerships with any of the programs, but if they do, you would need to go through your HR and there are usually wait lists based on seniority and other factors. Partnership admission is not determined by the nursing program but by the hospital.

Just got my acceptance letter for spring 2015 MCC late start Hybrid!! Now what to do.....put it off and apply for CEP in Feb. or go ahead with it? AAAAHHHHHHH Decisions decisions!!!! Gawd I don't know what to do and they are only giving me 2 weeks to decide. Ugh.

Did you check out the RN-BSN agreement with ASU? As long as you complete your ADN program with 2.5 or higher, pass state boards, and have all your BSN co-req's completed you are guaranteed to their online acceptance once you pass boards and finish what I just listed. It ends up being 5-8,000 cheaper than doing it with CEP or other schools. I think it would also be less stress, since with the CEP program you are taking online classes while ADN nursing classes. I have done almost 80% of my classes online/hybrid and it is hard enough balancing it. Just thought i would mention it. GL with your choice.

Who has been accepted to MCC Hybrid late start for Spring 15? I was in between choices and decided to accept it! Finally starting nursing school =)

Did you check out the RN-BSN agreement with ASU? As long as you complete your ADN program with 2.5 or higher, pass state boards, and have all your BSN co-req's completed you are guaranteed to their online acceptance once you pass boards and finish what I just listed. It ends up being 5-8,000 cheaper than doing it with CEP or other schools. I think it would also be less stress, since with the CEP program you are taking online classes while ADN nursing classes. I have done almost 80% of my classes online/hybrid and it is hard enough balancing it. Just thought i would mention it. GL with your choice.

Can you tell me how it's cheaper? It's my understanding that the agreement just locks you in to tuition rates at the moment and you are exempt from tuition hikes while you are finishing your associates....but overall wouldn't it be the same cost per credit hour through asu to bridge through them afterward or doing it concurrently?

Can you tell me how it's cheaper? It's my understanding that the agreement just locks you in to tuition rates at the moment and you are exempt from tuition hikes while you are finishing your associates....but overall wouldn't it be the same cost per credit hour through asu to bridge through them afterward or doing it concurrently?

I was looking at costs for other BSN programs, including books and other fees. Like if you went to GCU a their program runs 36-38,000 or so. Even though you can qualify for loans and grants and scholarship it is still pricey, especially if you aren't able to keep your grades high for scholarship amount. The nursing programs at community colleges run about 8500-9000 and without having doing the CEP route, depending which location you got accepted to, it might be easier to maintain working too. I think its like 18,000 or so to finish at ASU with the RN- BSN pathway. I was asking some nurses I work with and their costs were lower, given it was a couple years ago, so I rounded the cost up a little. I heard too that when your in the CEP sometimes you have to pay out of pocket, especially for summer time, since your amount given is less. These costs are a lot cheaper than going to say Chamblersin or Pima medical institute for nursing. Either way, I think if you get accepted it would be wise to start and not push it back if your able to go and focus.

I was looking at costs for other BSN programs, including books and other fees. Like if you went to GCU a their program runs 36-38,000 or so. Even though you can qualify for loans and grants and scholarship it is still pricey, especially if you aren't able to keep your grades high for scholarship amount. The nursing programs at community colleges run about 8500-9000 and without having doing the CEP route, depending which location you got accepted to, it might be easier to maintain working too. I think its like 18,000 or so to finish at ASU with the RN- BSN pathway. I was asking some nurses I work with and their costs were lower, given it was a couple years ago, so I rounded the cost up a little. I heard too that when your in the CEP sometimes you have to pay out of pocket, especially for summer time, since your amount given is less. These costs are a lot cheaper than going to say Chamblersin or Pima medical institute for nursing. Either way, I think if you get accepted it would be wise to start and not push it back if your able to go and focus.

Ok maybe I misread your first post, I thought you were saying it's cheaper to bridge from RN-bsn thru ASU then It would be to do ASU cep thru maricopa and that didn't make sense to me because it's still going to be at ASU tuition rates no matter what. The only difference would be the amount of time it takes to get the bachelors, one being accelerated and one being after your associates.

Specializes in Neuro, Telemetry.

If you really look at it, the time difference isnt much. Its like 1-2 semesters depending on if you go part time or full time for the RN-BSN. For CEP, after you get your ADN, you still have one or 2 more classes to take for your BSN. SO you have 1 more semester of school (or at least that is how I understand it). When bridging to BSN, you have 2-3 semesters of classes to get your BSN. I could be wrong on this though. The CEP is good though for cutting down time on the wait list for ADN and 1-2 less semesters off the end of the BSN. So either way it is faster from start to finish, but for someone who is already accepted to the ADN program, the difference isnt much. GL in whatever you choose!

If you really look at it, the time difference isnt much. Its like 1-2 semesters depending on if you go part time or full time for the RN-BSN. For CEP, after you get your ADN, you still have one or 2 more classes to take for your BSN. SO you have 1 more semester of school (or at least that is how I understand it). When bridging to BSN, you have 2-3 semesters of classes to get your BSN. I could be wrong on this though. The CEP is good though for cutting down time on the wait list for ADN and 1-2 less semesters off the end of the BSN. So either way it is faster from start to finish, but for someone who is already accepted to the ADN program, the difference isnt much. GL in whatever you choose!

Yes that's true it's not a huge difference, I believe it's 18months if you complete all the courses back to back...they are offered as 7.5 week courses it says.

Can someone confirm if the Level one Fingerprint card that you get to be put on the waitlist is the same one that's used to start the program? Or is there new one that is needed? Mine says confirmed on the application page, double checked that the card says Level One and it doesn't expire until 2 years after we're set to graduate....just want to make sure I don't need a new set of prints....

You only need one fingerprint clearance card. It is the same one for the wait list.

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