A nursing student in need of some advice from elder nurses.

Nurses General Nursing

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I'm a second semester nursing student on summer break.

Nursing school & daycare broke me last semester. Completely depleted my savings account. It was so bad that I was late on my rent this month and my bills are past due. So I've been looking for a job as a PCA over the summer to save up some money for the coming semester. I pay $560 a month in daycare and I've been in desperate need of a full time job so that I can start saving for this fall.

After many months of applying, I got an interview at an area hospital for a PCA position. I'm excited, but the only problem is that I know for a fact I won't be able to keep up with the work schedule this fall. Its a rotating shift where I'd have to work weekdays and I absolutely cannot do that because of my clinical schedule in August (Mon-Thurs). I will be off Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays in the fall, so a weekend or PRN position would be ideal.

I want this job so bad, but I know that I won't be able to keep up with the rotating shifts come this fall. I'm thinking about going on the interview, leaving out the fact that I won't be able to work the rotating shifts in the fall, hopefully getting the job, and then telling my manager that my schedule will have to change in August. Is this a good idea? I'd love to work at this hospital after I graduate. I don't want to burn bridges but I really need the money.

They are aware of how nursing school schedules work. I would bet that if you told them that you'd be available most weekends come fall they'd be happy c that, especially if you say you'd be happy to float to whatever unit needed you most. You'll get experience in a lot of interesting places and if you end up some shift in a place you're not crazy about, well, it's not permanent. :)

They are aware of how nursing school schedules work. I would bet that if you told them that you'd be available most weekends come fall they'd be happy c that especially if you say you'd be happy to float to whatever unit needed you most. You'll get experience in a lot of interesting places and if you end up some shift in a place you're not crazy about, well, it's not permanent. :)[/quote']

I would always focus on the positive side of this. If it comes up point out the fact that you will be available on a consistent basis on the weekends, and be willing to float.

Specializes in Home Care, Peds, Public Health, DD Health.

on an off note, look to see if your school has any private scholarships. I was surprised to learn how many scholarships were available to nursing students and to students in general at my school and even though I didn't qualify for financial aid, I ended up getting a full scholarship once i found out about them and started applying! and online there are a lot of unique scholarships, I found some interesting ones for men and one for making a prom dress out of duct tape - cant do that but there are still some good ones out there. good luck with the job!!

Specializes in Emergency Nursing.

My school had an emergency fund for students. My laptop was stolen and I wrote a letter to the assistant dean explaining my situation, and was given a check. It was amazing. It was not advertised either; I think a staff member heard me complaining about my situation and that was how I found out. Explore your options!

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