Published
In states such as the one I practiced in after I graduated (PA), graduate nurses are allowed to practice for up to one year on a temporary license before they take boards. They are called "Graduate Nurse's" and can not sign their name RN. I worked as one for a month before I took my boards. :)
In my state they would call you a RNA (Registered Nurse Applicant). Some people never pass the NCLEX and therefore never become an actual nurse (not saying this is you, I'm sure you'll pass the 1st time). So actually you may be called graduate nurse in your state, but graduating doesn't actually make you a nurse. Just like if you graduated from law school and never passed the bar, technically you are not a lawyer (you're just a graduate of whatever school you attended. ex) Harvard graduate, not a graduate lawyer). You can't legally practice as a nurse without a license, but soon you will be able to practice as a nurse. CONGRATS on your journey!!
*sigh* oh, the eager new grad...
You may work as a nurse, but you can't say you are a nurse until you pass your boards and have a license number saying you are. I'm sure you can work and take boards and pass them, but until that happens, nobody (that matters) recognizes you as a nurse.
The coursework does not make a nurse. The NCLEX does.
OhioCCRN, MSN, NP
572 Posts
What do you call a graduate Nurse who has not taken boards? a nurse? just not licensed yet?.... hmm...