Re: What can I expect in Accelerated BSN Program?
Accelerated options are just what it says, accelerated! I just started a 13 month program in winston salem, nc and it moves al ong very quickly. We attend class tuesday to friday from 8-5 with an hour for lunch, which is usually spent reading. the classes entail an extreme amount of reading and there is not enough classroom time to cover all of the material that is subject for testing, so we have to be diligent "Adult learners" and learn a lot on our own.
In a typical week we will read 5 or 6 chapters per class and have at least one test per class. At some parts of the first classes we would have 3 tests in a row and class time afterwards for each class to learn new material. Within the four days of class you have labs mixed in where you practice all of your skills.
Some pointers:
stay organized, you do not have enough time to reorganize
come to class with lot of questions
stay ahead of the reading, get the syllabus early and start now if you can, seriously.
don't waste class time complaining to the teacher about how fast things move, it's accelerated
be prepared to make a B in a class if you are a typical straight A person, our school uses a 7 point scale and does not curve anything. there is just not enough time to read and remember everything.
really learn the assessment material, you will use this non stop in your clinicals.
We started the program in january and have completed 5 classes and have just finished our first round at the hospital. This is where you start putting things together, get to know your nurse and na's and ask questions. Since we just started clinicals, we will have two days a week in the hospital from 6am-6pm, and then two days of week for class on tuesday and wednesday from 8-5. most people in the program do not work, some have kids, so it all comes down to time management. You will have some people in your class that are NA's, and they are very good resources for skills such as catheters, toileting, bed making, enemas, so get them to work with you.
I can let you know more as i go along, but it is definately tough but doable. The people that just finished the program before us had a 97.8 pass rate on the NCLEX, so that says something.
Start an email chain with your class and invite everyone to work together on study guides, enabling objectives, and resources. At first this seems crazy, but everyone will start working together because there is just too much to take in and whatever can be split up among the class helps out a lot.
If you have any particular questions, just let me know.
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