Nursing as 2nd bachelor at Chamberlain

Nursing Students Chamberlain College

Published

Hello all!

Im joining this website due to the fact that I was just admitted into Chamberlain College of Nursing at Tinley Park, IL. I just recently graduated a month ago in Health Information Management and earning my RHIA credential in August.

I am still paying off student loans and am trying to see if I can pay for college this time without my parents.

Have a few questions:

1. For everyone who got their 2nd bachelors....was it worth the money?

2. Was it hard paying for college yourself?

3. Im thinking of taking up a work from home coding specialist job while I am school. Further advice?

Before you start the program, I would really be asking local employers what they think about Chamberlain College of Nursing and if it is even accepted by employers in your state. From doing some research, the MSN program FAQ page states, "Chamberlain is not authorized to offer programs in all states. Keep checking chamberlain.edu/approvals to see if we are now offering the program of your choice in your state," and that the program is owned by a for-profit college company, Devry Education Group. This raises some red flags and you should really call up those local employers and financial aid counselors before you take out any loans. Many people on this website strongly oppose paying hefty tuition fees and it appears from the website that Chamberlain falls into this category. This is based on the conclusion that you, without a nursing degree/diploma, only qualify for the three year BSN program, costs $82,350 (122 credits times $675 per credit hour). This program isn't just expensive, but insanely expensive, even when you compare it to top programs on the US News list. Since you have a degree, you might also only qualify for little financial aid and might need to rely on private loans. I'd strongly encourage you to look up starting salaries for new graduates (not just starting salaries) and the interest rates and figure how much and how long you'll be paying that back for. It might not be possible to pay back those loans for a very long time or without living poorly for awhile.

I would look for other options. From what I understand that program is VERY expensive. If you already have a BA in something, you won't get much in terms of financial aid.

There are other programs.

Thank you for the advice. Although they said I have 51 credits transferred in so I'm not sure if that is going help me save more money

Thanks, knowing this, I might just get my ADN degree at a local community college near me.

Specializes in Hospitalist Medicine.
Thanks, knowing this, I might just get my ADN degree at a local community college near me.

I'd go the ADN route is much less expensive and many ADN programs have a 2nd Degree Accelerated program. I did my ADN first and then went to Chamberlain to finish up the BSN. Much less expensive that way.

Hello all!

Im joining this website due to the fact that I was just admitted into Chamberlain College of Nursing at Tinley Park, IL. I just recently graduated a month ago in Health Information Management and earning my RHIA credential in August.

I am still paying off student loans and am trying to see if I can pay for college this time without my parents.

Have a few questions:

1. For everyone who got their 2nd bachelors....was it worth the money?

2. Was it hard paying for college yourself?

3. Im thinking of taking up a work from home coding specialist job while I am school. Further advice?

I have 2 previous Bachelors. I completed them at the same time though. I went to a private Christian school out of state, so I know about the loans situation. Because I have 3 kids under 3, and I prefer to stay at home, I am taking the CNA-Fast track LPN-Advanced Placement ASN route. It just makes more sense for MY situation and family because these programs are extremely cheap ($1100-$3200~$6600). I currently just completed my CNA, and I am waitlisted to start the LPN class for 1-2 semesters, which gives me the chance to work now in the healthcare field as I wait. I complete the LPN from Fall 2017 to Spring 2018. Then that's done! Then I can test out to skip the 1st year of the ASN program, and go in as Advanced Placement and complete it in 2 semesters. So it's longer, but that's cool with me because our family is in no rush! But for you, if you're not rushing as well, maybe you could be open to the LPN to ASN route at a local community college where amazingly cheaper. But if you're single and open to relocate, I Strongly encourage a Post-Baccalaureate program where you can get your BSN in just 1 year for those with a previous Bachelors. Hope this helps and gives you ideas!

Thanks for the advice.

I did want to tell you that I did fail out of a previous nursing school, but graduated with HIM. My total loans I owe right now is 40,000 in total. Chamberlain has transferred in 51/122 classes. Which would take my debt up to 80,000. Do you have an idea if this is worth it?

Specializes in EMS, ED, Trauma, CEN, CPEN, TCRN.
Thanks for the advice.

I did want to tell you that I did fail out of a previous nursing school, but graduated with HIM. My total loans I owe right now is 40,000 in total. Chamberlain has transferred in 51/122 classes. Which would take my debt up to 80,000. Do you have an idea if this is worth it?

So you're going to have $120,000 in loans? Hit the loan calculator and consider if you can afford to pay $1300-$1500 per month for 10 years and adding on about $45,000 in interest: FinAid | Calculators | Loan Calculator. Is $165,000 what you want to spend on your education?

Thank you for this heads up,

I about to contact the admission advisor telling her I will be declining an offer and going to a cheaper route (ADN). The program at my school is offering a part-time option.

+ Add a Comment