re: Help!? Is $27,000 too much to LVN and RN school??
This is one of those questions each of us probably has to answer for ourselves, but I'm inclined to be a bit promiscuous with my advice. That sure sounds like a lot of money. Worth it? Well, tuition can be a very good investment. If you have a long career ahead of you, you could easily make it up in better pay over, say, a job in retail sales or food service. Of course, there are lots of ways to make a decent living, including some that are easier and/or pay better than nursing. But if you like nursing (I do) it's a good way to make living wages and feel useful. Better than average job security, too.
The specific course you've described has pros and cons. Getting started as an LVN could help finance the RN bridge. Some facilities even help with tuition. In my area, though, LPNs are pretty seriously underpaid, except in long-term care, where you can make ok money but earn every cent. Working as an LVN/LPN seems like great experience--nothing prepares you for being a nurse like being a nurse--but economically, going straight for your RN probably makes better sense, if you can.
In my area, you can get LPN training through the public vocational school in a year's time, for about $3000. (It was actually a good deal less, when I looked into it, but that was several years ago, and there are books and uniforms to consider.) $12,000 sounds awfully high, but I don't know what alternatives are in your area.
I went for an associate's degree at a local community college which was around 1500/semester for five semesters. Tuition tends to be a bargain in my state (WV). Our university gets students from all over the mid-Atlantic. I've heard it's less expensive to pay our out-of-state tuition than to pay in-state in NJ. Tuition at my CC was about the same as the university, per semester, but my ASN took half the time (roughly) as a BSN, and entry-level hospital RN pays the same, either way.
So, I would really, really, really recommend shopping around a bit before jumping in. I can't imagine an associate's degree from a community college costing much more that the LVN program you mention, and a good deal less is certainly possible. It's typically a year longer, but you'd be making decent money right out of school. There are lots of RN-to-BSN programs if you want to complete your bachelor's degree, later. I still intend to do that, although I am finding it's mighty nice to be out of school and I haven't been breaking my neck to get back in. If I were younger, though, I'd be looking a lot harder at eventually going for a master's program, and maybe even a doctorate.
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