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Nursing school or become a teacher?



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  #21  
Old Dec 08, 2006, 08:20 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2006
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

Nursing is a lot of teaching, so why not get paid a lot more to be a neacher

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  #22  
Old Dec 08, 2006, 08:26 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

Originally Posted by slou! View Post
My friend is a teacher and HATES it. She said she would like to do nursing, but obviously is going to wait it out and make sure a, she really wants to do nursing and b, gives teaching some time. She used to waitress before hand and actually made the same amount of money working as a waitress in Cracker Barrel! That is absolutely rediculous!

Slou, that is a pretty sad commentary, I agree!

Also, as someone who "gave teaching some time" and waited for it to work out, I have just one piece of advice for your friend. She shouldn't waste any more time waiting. If she hates it now, she will not like it a whole lot better in two or three years after the paperwork continues to pile up on her.

I actually like teaching. Even as a beginning teacher who was snowed under and stressed out, I still liked teaching right from the very beginning. If I were married or had a partner who helped with the house expenses, I might try to find a way to deal with the crazy hours and the paperwork and just stick with it. But I am a single woman. For me the decision to give nursing a try is partly a lifestyle decision and partly a financial decision.

If your friend doesn't like teaching now, I seriously doubt that she will like it later. Just my .02....and thanks for your response!

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  #23  
Old Dec 08, 2006, 08:29 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

Originally Posted by iceyspots View Post
Nursing is a lot of teaching, so why not get paid a lot more to be a neacher

Hehe....LOL

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  #24  
Old Dec 09, 2006, 08:03 AM
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Smile Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

Your welcome to my thoughts anytime I hear your stress, with your BS degree, you may already meet some nursing school requirements - good luck!

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  #25  
Old Dec 09, 2006, 10:25 AM
tencat's Avatar
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

I was a teacher for twelve years. I paid FICA then. I also had to pay for my health insurance. If you hate teaching, it will just get worse as the years go by. There are a lot of paralells between teaching and nursing, and teaching will help you to teach your patients about their conditions. There is a lot of teaching in nursing, I find. I know other nurses beg to differ, but on the whole I find that I feel more appreciated as a nurse than I ever did as a teacher. Not to say that overall the appreciation factor could be WAY better in nursing, too, but at least once a day a patient says 'thank you' for something I've done for them. "Thank you's were few and far between in teaching. Just my experience. Go for it.

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  #26  
Old Dec 09, 2006, 12:07 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Red face Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

This is an interesting thread for me because I am a nurse that has considered going back to school to become a teacher. Of course, I've considered going back for just about anything, LOL! I did always want to be a teacher when I was younger though. I am very close friends with a few teachers and I know that the profession isn't perfect. Your schedule does surprise me a bit though. What grade are you teaching? Are you a fairly new teacher? I ask because you mentioned spending a great deal of time writing lesson plans. I was under the impression that after you are teaching for a few years, it gets a bit easier because lesson plans are already in place and you may just have to alter them a bit.

Maybe teaching is a bit different in your area of the country, but the teachers that I know work very good hours, 7AM-4PM. And definately no weekends or holidays, which you may not realize how important it is until you are spending holidays with your buddies at work instead of at home with your family. They do talk about having to spend time outside of class grading papers, but it doesn't seem too bad though. Both of the teachers I know are able to hold second jobs outside of their regular teaching jobs, one as a fitness instructor and the other as a private tutor. I am not trying to minimize the difficulties you are having with your job, but I just want to point out that the grass is always greener on the other side.

Please do not be lured into nursing by the promise of better pay. I am a new nurse and I do not believe that the pay is adequate compensation for the amount of work and responsibilty that I have. Pay attention to the threads on this site to gain a better understanding of the issues that nurses are facing. It's not pretty out there. Make sure that you shadow a few nurses in different practice areas for a full 12-hour shift before you decide. Also, I would go straight for the RN. You already have a bachelor's degree, so this would make more sense and you would have more options available to you.

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  #27  
Old Dec 09, 2006, 10:07 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

Thank you, tencat. It is so nice to hear from a former teacher turned nurse who doesn't regret it.

I agree that there are some parallels between nursing and teaching, in the sense that it is a helping profession. I just can't get over the difference in pay.

I am sick and tired of being broke all the time. It's not because I'm out spending extravagantly. I buy shoes at Payless, many of my clothes at Target, all of my make-up is Maybelline, and I do my own hair. It is really getting old....I just don't see our teaching salaries going up anytime soon.


Hi, KatRN... Yes I am a relatively new teacher. Perhaps your teacher friends work in a school or district that doesn't require as much documentation from its teachers... One of the reasons I am spending time on lessons this year is because the new assistant principal at my school is requiring more detail in all of our lessons than we have traditionally done. We also have adopted brand new science and social studies series which require completely different lessons this year.

In addition our new superintendant has increased what we need to document for report cards. This past semester some of my students' report cards were eight and nine pages long, filled with boxes I had to manually check off to indicate on a scale of 1 to 5 where the child is at with very specific reading comprehension skills.

I could go on and on...

As far as the salary... I still feel that based on what I've researched and what I've heard from other nurses here, that the pay is significantly higher in nursing. For nurses who have BSN's and masters degrees, I mean.

If I got a master's in education tomorrow, my salary would go up to $38,000 and I would still be working 60 hours a week. A nurse with a master's degree would easily make $10,000 to $20,000 more than that depending on the setting.

I have no doubt that many nurses (and probably eventually me) feel that they are not properly compensated for the amount of work and stress they deal with. But the bottom line is that they still make more than teachers.

I know I probably will work harder in nursing. And I won't have two months off every summer. And I won't have as many bathroom breaks and all of that. But I need to make more money. If I get the LPN certificate, then I will have the ability to choose what shift I work on. At that point I can go to grad school if I want. I would like to get a master's in nursing or physical therapy, I'm not decided yet. I've heard good things about physical therapy, that there are many opportunities yet it is supposedly not as stressful as nursing, and the patients have a higher rate of success due to the nature of physical therapy.

I really like your idea of shadowing a nurse on a 12-hour shift. Thanks for that suggestion.


Last edited by busylady61 : Dec 09, 2006 at 10:22 PM.
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  #28  
Old Dec 10, 2006, 07:06 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

Originally Posted by KatRN,BSN View Post
Also, I would go straight for the RN. You already have a bachelor's degree, so this would make more sense and you would have more options available to you.
I agree. Look for a bridge program that offers evening and weekend classes and/or online classes. It takes a little longer than LPN but in the end, you'll be glad you went the extra mile.

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  #29  
Old Dec 10, 2006, 07:30 AM
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

Thanks Kat and Tachy.

I agree that would be the best route. But in my area the only accredited bridge programs are offered in the daytime, which would conflict with my teaching job.

The online private universities are way out of my price range, I've found.

I'm going to start the LPN program in August (18 months, part time evenings). Who knows, maybe sometime between now and then one of the local universities will begin to offer an evening bridge program...

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  #30  
Old Dec 10, 2006, 09:50 AM
tencat's Avatar
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Re: Nursing school or become a teacher?

What I did was get a part time nursing aide at the local hospital. I worked 8 hours a week for about 7 months, and it gave me a good idea of what to expect as a nurse. I didn't have to go back to school and get a CNA, but not all hospitals will accept that. I don't regret leaving teaching at all. The salary is A LOT better, but the retirement leaves a lot to be desired. I taught long enough to qualify for retirement from two states, but I don't think that will be enough. I do miss the breaks, but I only work three days a week now and have four days free. I like that so far.

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