My take on the should I become a LPN/LVN first

Nursing Students LPN/LVN Students

Published

I see this question posted on allnurses all the time. The should I become an LVN/LPN first or go straight for RN? I'd like to give this question a home so to speak and my opinion based on my own personal experience and taking into account various situations.

IF you can live at home inexpensively and have a fair flexible non demanding job OR you can afford to live like a poor student for the 2-4 years then I would suggest going the RN community college or state college route. Do your prereqs, wait out the list and maybe work as a CNA/PCT on the side. You'll come out of the experience with little to no debt.

The main factor in this working for you is usually if you have time. Usually if you are young and have no heavy financial commitments. Theres a certain period of time based on your family where living at home with your parents is acceptable and in some case encouraged. If this is your situation this is what I personally would recommend.

But TTP you say I have a family/live on my own/have to pay rent/no parental/spousal support. I should become an LVN first right?

Do you need a wage soon? OR Can you live on a CNA's salary for a couple of years?

If you can get your LVN training inexpensively then yes go for it.

If you can then can you afford to live plus pay back student loans while earning an LVN wage ( it's less than what the schools are going to promise you)

Do you have a plan in place for once you become an LVN to complete your RN? If so then YES become an LVN first.

My personal situation is this. My husband lost his job of 18 years in March 08 although he found another in less than 3 weeks it paid less and our sense of security was gone. I needed a career and I didn't have 4 years to do it.

I signed up for a private college to start in June 08

Put half on federal loans half in cash. After having private loans for another college years ago I always suggest you avoid and stick to the nice government ones

Graduated June 09 got a license and job in Oct 09 (paid less than expected oh well)

Before I started LVN school I never knew I wanted to be a nurse so only had English as a prereq. While I was doing LVN school I took psych and sociology courses online. My plan was to apply to a local college as soon after graduation as I could

In spring 10 I applied for RN school. I applied to a school that would let me take my prereqs while still officially being in the program.

I start Fall 10. I move into clinical classes for the bridge in Fall 11 and I finish Dec 2012

So break down: Time elapsed from starting LVN to projected graduation date 4.5 years. About the time it would have taken if I did the community college and wait list route so that comes out even

What I got in return: LVN License and a job that pays more than McDonalds and some experience.

What I gave up in return : Way more $$$ and lots more loans. Probably I'll come out even in the end if you use the equation

Tuition-Increase in earning=0

I think my choice worked out because I was focused and worked out my game plan ahead of time including plans B-Z

If I had the choice and could have got the community college route heck yes but it wasn't open to me anymore.

So yes being an LVN is ok for me but only for the short term. I think I will get through RN school ok and I think I will already have known what burnout feels like. Hopefully be a better wise more savvy new grad RN than I was an new grad LVN

So whats your story?

Specializes in STNA.

My story? Started 4 yr BSN degree over 10 yrs ago before kids. Got pregnant during my sophomore year (oops, hubby and I had been married for 7yrs with no luck in the baby dept, LOL!). Became a stay at home mom and decided not to apply to the nursing program even though I had completed all my prereqs and support classes (with a 3.9 GPA) and was all set. Had another kid and life went on. Dream to be a nurse never really went away. Still want to be a nurse but don't want full time school or tons of student loans. I only want to go to school part time and only want to work part time until my kids are high school age or out of the house. There is a part time LPN program (22 months long) near my home with an excellent reputation and 95% pass rate on NCLEX-PN. There are at least 2 different LPN to BSN options that I could take someday once the kids are older. I love the geriatric population. So I'm heavily considering the LPN route first! :redpinkhe

Thanks for your replies, I myself is a single mother of three that needs to work sooner than later. Spending 4 years on a bachlor already has got me wanting to make some money now. I have great support so I could just go back to school for a BSN but the college I went to is 45 miniuts one way. I would love to go back to that college because it is a great school and the nursing program is strong. However, I have spent 2 years driving down a highway I am now tired of looking at.

That school has less pre-reques since I went to school there everything transfers into the libral arts portion of the BSN program. A cruel fact is that the BSN program 20 miniuts away like I mention program was just reinstated, however, my social stats class won't transfer and i would still have to take College algebra not to mention they want 6 credits in foreign language. Graduating from that school would take me 5 years plus. This is why I'm leaning towards LPN to get experience and make a living then returning for my RN in a year. I was thinking about a ADN then a MPH? only time will tell. Thanks!

Specializes in Hospice / Ambulatory Clinic.

I think the reality is a lot of nurses get there in a less that direct manner. The things we do before getting to nursing makes us into nice rounded people.

I was just wondering how did your idea of becoming an LVN first turn out?

Specializes in geriatrics, IV, Nurse management.

My story started out on the LPN/RPN route. I chose this in high school because I wanted to be a nurse but knew I could not get into university for RN with my GPA or afford the cost. I took the RPN/LPN route. I'm living on a decent wage of 21$/hr while paying back my loans and looking forward to getting my BSCN/Masters when I have enough saved up. Plus, I'll have the experience and hands on approach from working as an LPN/RPN prior:)

thanks for posting this! i'm about to start an LPN program that offers a bridge to an RN program after completion. I'm married but my husband's job doesn't pay enough for me to work part-time and pursue a regular RN degree. We have a 2-year-old daughter as well, so I'm motivated to get a good career that I can be good at, and nursing was the best choice for me. I know so many people that have done the regular 3-4 year RN programs and they're doing so well now that I was questioning whether the path I chose would work as well. But since I don't have time or financial leeway for a regular RN program I'm doing what you did and paying my way through a 1-year LPN program and then stepping up to an RN degree. Good to know that I'm not screwing up as long as I keep my head in the game!

DH works full time and I have a 3 yr old. We're living on one income. I'm a CNA but am a SAHM with our daughter. Hopefully I get accepted this year and graduate next year. After I graduate, my husband will be starting the police academy and he'll be at school full time and just me working. So we'll be swapping. That's why I need to be done in a year. When he gets done I'll probably not work again and do the bridge program.

I am glad I got my LVN/LPN degree first. So many of my RN friends had trouble finding jobs right out of school because everyone wanted experience. Luckily I had already been a nurse since I was working as an LVN. I did everything the RN did. If you never looked at our badge you wouldnt know who was who. We all had the same duties. So I had no trouble finding a good job and I didnt come in as an RN fresh out of school looking like a deer in headlights. My program was one year and my bridge to RN was one year. I am making 60,000 a year as an RN, where people that started same time as me at a 4 year university are still in school. Everyone has their own path that works for them, and there are many ways to get to your RN degree but I am happy the route I took. It worked well for me and made money sooner.

+ Add a Comment