Originally Posted by nurse-to-be1000
I am interested in a non-accelerated BSN program because the accelerated ones are so fast. However, I also already have a psych degree, all the pre-reqs done and I keep hearing it is going to take me 3-4 years to get my BSN. Somehow this just doesn't make sense to me. Has anyone who aleady has a BA/BS gone back for the BSN and not done an accelerated program? How long did it take you? I looked at some of the community college programs and in one semester of my first semester in nursing it looks like I had more clinical time than the associates degree and I don't see how I could feel confident going and working on the floor at this point. Most programs that are BSN and not accelerated say it will take me 4 years to coplete the program which makes no sense what so ever to me.
NTB
Again, there are so many individual variations among nursing programs that there's no one "correct" answer. I can tell you that there are
many BSN programs out there (although I don't know how the programs
in your area work) -- I taught in one -- where you enter the college/university as a "pre-nursing" major, and don't even apply for and get
accepted into
the nursing program until you are a rising junior; all of the nursing courses take place in the junior and senior years, and someone who already had a baccalaureate degree could simply apply for the nursing program (which, of course, doesn't mean one would necessarily get accepted), and complete just those two years of the curriculum (
assuming, that is, that all prerequisities had been met).
As for hours of supervised clinical experience, that is a standard that is established by the state BON (Board of Nursing) --
every program in the state (diploma, ADN, or BSN; accelerated or "generic") has to meet the minimun required number of clinical hours in order to be approved by the BON. Programs can choose to include more hours; but even the minimum standard is typically high enough, and hard enough to implement, that it's rare now for schools to go
much over the requirement. If anything, in
most areas, community college programs tend to be heavier on clinical hours than BSN programs, so I suspect that you may be misunderstanding something about the associate's degree literature you were looking at.
However, if the
actual, live people at schools in your area are telling you that it would take you 3-4 years to complete a BSN in their programs, I'm certainly not here to argue with them about that, or tell you something different. There is also the question of whether
relocating is a possibility, if none of the schools in your area are going to meet your needs/interests -- there are a
kazillion schools of nursing out there.

Good luck with your search --
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