Re: Too soon for MSN?
I agree with many of the comments below. You need as much experience as it takes to determine what specialty you want to follow (passion + a desire to learn more). For some people, this takes months; for other a decade.
Graduate school will take time, money, some stress, and maybe a grey hair or two. I believe that it is better to do this sooner in your life rather than later. Trust me, graduate school is so much easier w/o worrying about mortgage and babies!
In nearly every other discipline, individuals pursue graduate degrees soon after competing undergraduate prorgams. The mean age of students in law, PhD programs in the sciences or humanities, or MD programs are in the mid-20s. Sometimes nursing is its worst enemy by insisting that RNs wait a decade or so before going for a MSN degree.
At my university, we will enroll parttime MSN students 6 months after NCLEX. The initial classes for everyone are the core classes: theory, research, health policy, epidemiology, patho. You do not need years of practice under your belt to take a course in evidence-based practice and research. Another good point for starting parttime is that your brain is still "wired" for being a student. Writing a 10 page paper is no sweat for someone fresh out of their BSN program; it is much tougher for someone who has been out of the college environment for 10 years or so.
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