Re: LPN FIRST OR RN???????????????????
This is exactly what I did and I'm so glad I did!!!
When it came time to apply to RN I was short one class so I would have had to wait for the next application season, I was so ready to get started so I decided to jump into LPN and bridge straight into RN.
So, I did a 11mo LPN program and graduated in July, took boards, and started RN the next month!!!! I am so thrilled because RN has been a piece of cake (we basically learned all this stuff in LPN, so now its just more paperwork and details) and I'm able to work at a local children's hospital as a nurse! The extra experience in clinicals (LPN clinicals are a lot more than RN school) and at work is giving me a huge advantage compared to my classmates who are only getting clinicals 2x per week, with long breaks for holidays and summer. Personally I think that's really disruptive to learning and retaining the information to take those breaks.
I will say LPN was much harder than I expected (for me it was 5day/wk 8hr/day for 11 solid months) and all the concepts were new, obviously. My RN program is just 2x week clinicals with 2 half-days of classes each week, and everything is a review of stuff we learned last year. About half my classmates are LPN's bridging and the other half are traditional students and all the LPN's are working full time, doing great in class. I'm only going to work about 24hr/wk because I'm a single mom, but the money is really nice (bc my hospital is basically a children's long term care I make what the hospitals are paying new RN's in my area).
Doing it this way shaved 6mo off the whole RN process (assuming I got admitted the first time I applied) but the extra clinical time and confidence that's given me, plus the HUGE advantage of working as a nurse/earning good money during my last year of nursing school has been invaluable! I'll be honest, I almost didn't go this route because of misconceptions about the role of LPN's and I thought the program would be really watered down and easy, but I was wrong on each account and now I have a new appreciation for what LPN's do and the valuable place they have in nursing (and I'm really grateful for that!)
The bottom line is, I wanted to be a nurse, and now I am! Yes, I still have about 6mo until I'm an RN, but I get to care for pts and be in this field I'm so passionate about. I have no regrets!
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