Accelerated BSN v. MSN

Nurses Career Support

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Hi everyone!

This website has been so helpful in the months since I decided to leave my freelance writing career and go back to school for nursing. Thanks to you all!

Now I have some specific questions that are leaving me just perplexed.

I would like to do either:

an accelerated BSN (Wayne State in Detroit is my top choice though U of M in Ann Arbor is launching a program next year that also interests me.)

OR

an alternate entry MSN (I've researched U of Tx and Seattle Univ so far, in the latter they gear you towards Nurse Practitioner)

My dilemma. I still have 14 credits of prereqs to do before I can get into the BSN programs...and I currently live in Madrid so I am pretty much stuck doing them online and Wayne won't except online labs. So, that means the chance of me qualifying for the 2004 admission year is very slim. I will be back stateside early next year and could do my prereqs and shoot for the BSN program for 2005.

HOWEVER, if I am going to wait a whole another year I could easily prep myself for the alt entry MSN, the prereqs are just a little more intense, and U of Tx for example will accept online labs (like those given at CCCOnline or the Excelsior exams), so I could do some of it in Madrid. Also I have taught GRE prep for years and could slam through that test.

I think I have a good chance of being accepted in either a BSN or MSN program for 2005. Also I don't have children or other family responsibilities and have saved enough cash to study w/o working.

The big difference I see is in years. I am 37 now, if I do accelerated BSN in 2005, I am out in 2006. If I go for the MSN in 2005, it will be 2008 before I am out.

Finally (I know this is a big build up), here is my question to you, the experts:

Is it worth it for me to go for the MSN?

Will getting an MSN even though I am coming from a non-nursing background impede me from getting jobs?

Will a MSN limit me in any way in nursing? Right now I am drawn to the caring aspect of the field, and the excitement, and the changing nature of the science behind it. I want the chance to work as an RN and then move on in the field if I so choose.

Sorry this is so long. Making the decision to pursue nursing, as soul-searching as it was, seems easy in comparison to figuring out HOW to pursue nursing.

Any advice would be so very much appreciated.

Sincerely,

CandelaLee

CandelaLee...I was accepted to both an accelerated BSN program and a Graduate Entry Level Program. I made the decision to do the accelerated Bsn b/c:

1) I wanted to get in, get out and get working

2) I'd be done faster

and 3) I didn't want to get my MSN until I had some experience and actually knew which area was right for me.

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