Re: Confused about going to school??
Sounds like maybe you would be more interested in medical assisting rather than training to be an RN.
I've been an CMA for 15+ years. Although I've worked with a few RNs in medical offices, this is much more common in specialty offices were procedures are performed (gastroenterology, for instance, where endoscopic exams are done) than in primary care. Although an RNs skills would be great in family practice, that level of skill isn't really necessary and isn't cost-effective. Physician practices are really staffing at bare bones levels right now and medical assistants are much more affordable.
If you decide to look into MA programs, be sure to look at ones accredited by CAAHEP or you will not be eligible to sit for the CMA exam from the AAMA. In fact, the American Association of Medical Assistants Website may be a good place to start if you want more info.
CMAs can give injections (just not IV route), draw blood, perform EKGS and other in-office tests, call in scripts (at least in every state where I've worked), etc. Training also involves office-specific skills such as insurance and coding, some general practice management tasks, etc. Most schools offer an AS degree which would take 2 years, although some of your previous credits may be transferable.
If you really aren't sure whether or not you can cut it in nursing school, you might try setting up a meeting with the instructors/advisors from your previous program. Ask them for information about why you were advised to quit, what were your short-comings at that time, what advice would they have for you to overcome those short-comings, etc. My experience is that most instructors want you to succeed, otherwise they wouldn't offered you admission in the first place. If they see that you genuinely want to know how to improve and maybe give it another shot, I'm sure they'll be happy to advise you.
Nursing News