Re: Accelerated BSN or 4-year Program better for Grad School acceptance?
I honestly don't see any substantive difference between a traditional or accelerated BSN program. You would be taking the same quality and number of nursing courses as a traditional BSN. A traditional BSN does not usually start nursing core until their junior year, which in essence is the same timeframe more or less as an accelerated, except that accelerated students have longer days and shorter semester breaks. Accelerated programs as you know were designed initially to address a perceived nursing shortage by attracting non-nursing college graduates to complete requirements and enter the workforce quicker, thereby avoiding duplicating general college requirements. From what I have read from program to program, traditional and accelerated BSN students get the same number of clinical hours too.
I would have to assume that in terms of applying to a graduate program, completing an accelerated program when you already have a bachelor's would be more impressive because your ability to successfully undergo such a compacted curriculum is already an early indicator of your ability to perform well as a graduate student. Additionally, the fact that you also have a prior degree is a plus in that it demonstrates that you have a bit more life experience and academic prowess than your younger counterparts. You also want to keep in mind that many NP programs value experience as an RN in the field before undertaking their program (at least 2 years is ideal) ... within that time you will also be able to identify which specialty is best for you. Your success as an RN and recommendations to that effect would speak more volumes to your potential success in the NP program and by that time the fact that your BSN was or was not accelerated is more likely, if at all, less important.
IMHO, graduating from an accelerated BSN at a top school is better than completing a traditional BSN at a mediocre school if you're looking to do graduate work. Based on my experience, where you go to school means a lot when pursuing graduate work irrespective of how well you did academically. I am personally pursuing the accelerated route, hoping to enter the best school I can, and much prefer to finish within the 12-15 month timeframe than drag out long semester breaks waiting to finish as a transfer BSN.
Good luck in whichever route you choose and best for you!
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