Wanna know what an LPN license can get you?

When I received nearly $325,000 dollars in scholarship money, people stopped asking me why I got my LPN license. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

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People used to ask me why I "settled" and went to a vocational school to become an LPN, instead of going to a traditional college and becoming a "real nurse." I always had a list of potential answers running through my mind when that happened:

✔️ I do the exact same thing an RN does at my job with absolutely no variation.

✔️ I train both new grad RN's and BSN's, and have discovered that in my field, experience and competence are more valuable than the initials at the end of my name.

✔️ I work with babies, which is pretty damn cool (turns out I like them better than many adults).

✔️ I have an incredibly flexible schedule that allows me to continue my education.

✔️ The pay is much, much better than when I was the drive-thru girl at Taco Bell.

✔️ I took on 11 months of school and no debt to make sure nursing was what I wanted, rather than 2-3 years and a boatload of loans.

✔️ This Microbiology test isn't hard. My six-month old vent-dependent patient went into respiratory distress last night, and I guided them through it. That was tough. I eat micro exams for breakfast!

✔️ Vocational school helped me develop study/homework skills, so that when I entered traditional college, I got easy A's.

✔️ In Honors classes revolving around theory, I could speak about practical application in real life situations.

✔️ When scholarship time rolled around, I wasn't simply a student who wished to change the world. I was already actively changing the world.

So many students apply to awards because of who they want to be, whereas I could apply because of who I already am. When I had to write numerous essays, personal statements, and narratives about myself and my future dreams, I had so many compelling stories to tell about my job as an LPN. When asked about community service, volunteer work, or past experience performing good deeds for others, I got the opportunity to explain how such things weren't simply extracurriculars to me, but rather an integral part of my day to day life as an LPN.

Those people who used to ask me why I "settled" and went to a vocational school to become an LPN, instead of going to a traditional college and becoming a "real nurse?" These days, I don't need to tell them anything. Because I was awarded $124,500 dollars to complete my bachelor's degree, and $200,000 dollars for any graduate school I choose. Not because I was a traditional student (I came from one of those schools, a vocational school for people who weren't "good enough" for regular college). Not because I did well in high school (I dropped out at 15). Not because I was cookie cutter (I've got a dirty mouth, a sarcastic streak a mile wide, and I wear jeans and red converse to business casual events). Not because I had special advantages (as an older student, I had to fight for every opportunity, knock on many doors, and annoy professors into letting me take on special projects). I received all of this because of my work as an LPN and the way it made me stand out among other students when I transitioned back into traditional college.

So don't let anyone tell you this is a road for people who "settle" or don't have what it takes to hack it at a "real" college. You have no idea where an LPN license will lead you, or the impact you will have on the world because of it.

The title should read, "Wanna know what you can get with an LPN license?...a stepping stone to an RN license". Because that was basically what the article was about.

I think its great that you're proud of your job. However, this article is confusing and misleading. RN's and LPN's do not have the same scope of practice and you stating that you are doing the same work as an RN sounds illegal to me. Not to mention the pay difference is pretty wide. RN and LPN education is entirely different and while I agree I have met some very comptenent LPNs in my time in health care, they do not learn the VERY important theory base that RNs do. Good luck furthering your education!

You can tell there are a lot of people with no working experience on here. More often then not when a nurse does a job they do not use their full scope of practice which is why the OP is able to do the exact same job as the RNs she works with. She wouldn't be able to go into most hospitals and be a staff nurse because the vast majority of hospitals only want BSN nurses these days. Also, she couldn't go into certain areas of nursing like critical care, for example.

Specializes in ER/Tele, Med-Surg, Faculty, Urgent Care.

1. I do the exact same thing an RN does at my job with absolutely no variation.

More details needed here, as typically RN & LPN roles are not interchangeable. Are there RNs at the company you work for? Who supervises you? An RN? While you may both perform the same skill sets, the RN has deeper knowledge base. Not sure what your point is here.

2. I train both new grad RN's and BSN's, and have discovered that in my field, experience and competence are more valuable than the initials at the end of my name.

You have been an LPN almost 3 years which is still considered a fairly new nurse,IMO, considering that the first 2 years learning curve is typically to become proficient for new grads. What are you "training" these RNs to do?

3. I work with babies, which is pretty damn cool (turns out I like them better than many adults). Are you doing home health/private duty nursing or?

7. This Microbiology test isn't hard. Most pre-reqs are not difficult. Though it depends on the instructor & the institution.

9. In Honors classes revolving around theory, I could speak about practical application in real life situations. OK, What subjects are these Honors courses in?

$200,000 dollars for any graduate school I choose. ‹Well I am glad to hear you plan on going to grad school, but one step at a time, grasshopper. Are you planning on CRNA or FNP as so many are when they are not yet RNs? I'm surprised that you have grad school scholarship when you have yet to complete a bachelor's degree but oh well if you say so.

There are many, many of us who started our nursing careers as LPNs, and who have continued our education. Every time I went back to school, (LPN>ADN/RN>BSN>MSN/FNP) I realized how much I did not know what I did not know. For example, I worked telemetry for 8 years so in NP school, thought I would not pay as much attention in advance pathophysiology to cardiac lecture. I thought I knew cardiac anatomy, but I did not really know it as well as I needed to. It was more in-depth, detailed.

Good luck in your pursuit.

Specializes in Labor and Delivery.

I think it's great that you are proud of the profession you chose! I think that it's important for anyone to love what they do, and I'm glad that you have found your calling and are feeling secure with the educational goals you have achieved.

I'm a BSN but not a RN yet (taking the boards next month), but I make it a point to learn from every single health care professional that I come across LVNs, RNs, and CNAs ALL have a plethora of wisdom to offer. You seem like a nurse that is very competent and has alot to offer. I wish you the absolute best in your endeavors.

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.

Congrats to you. How on earth did you get $300,000+ in scholarship money??

And why would anyone GIVE you $100k+ for a BSN and $200k for a graduate degree?? Why would anyone need that much, particularly for a nursing program?

Specializes in Care Coordination, Care Management.

I'm an RN and the LPNs I worked with in LTC were OUTSTANDING nurses from whom I was happy to learn.

$325,000 in scholarships?!? I don't think so...

That much money could go to 5, 10, or even 100 people. Why anyone would give that much money to one student is beyond me.

I've been a LPN over 20 years, and I still thank god for the RNs I work with! I may be able to perform the same " skills", but they have the critical thinking that I do not. And THAT is what makes us a awesome team! We need each other!

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.

"So many students apply to awards because of who they want to be, whereas I could apply because of who I already am."

I like this part of your article. I might say the same about someone who lived through a life-threatening illness as a child and wants to pay it forward, or a person who diligently cared for a chronically ill sibling, grandpa or something along those lines.

Here is what I would say about the role of the LPN/LVN I've observed since 1976. [

1) Your state scope of practice tells you what you can and cannot do task-wise, but that is not equal to "doing the same thing as an RN does" because of the different education involved in both. It's dismissive of those who furthered their education to say so.

2) There's no "scope of practice" on thinking itself, but education advances the parameters (all education)

3) The end of the nursing shortage changed everything. Many facilities have opted to exclude LPNs from critical care and other high-acuity specialties but that doesn't mean they are not allowed to work in those units.

4) It's absolutely fine to stop at the LPN stage, especially if jobs are plentiful in your area and you are not planning to specialize or seek a position in education and/or other leadership categories.

I do believe the path is going to get narrower and more difficult for people who choose to do that as time goes on, and fewer people will successfully buck the trend.

In the most recent Institute of Medicine Report they talk about a "seamless track" from vocational/practical nursing to higher levels including the DNP and PhD for some people. I can only hope they put some dollars behind that and sound policies that reduce the financial and work life burden on current license holders (LPN, ADN, etc)

There's nothing wrong with being an LPN. Many... MOST of the LPNs I've worked with have impressed the heck out of me!

Awesome!! Congrats!

Specializes in ICU.

My hospital system laid off all LPNs in all roles system-wide a couple of months back. All a LPN degree would have gotten me is a place in line at the unemployment office.

I'm just saying - this is looking through some serious rose-colored glasses. I'm glad people are willing to roll the dice and become LPNs still, because there are many benefits as you have mentioned - but they have to realize they are dramatically cutting down their job prospects starting out as a LPN today.