Published
I would say to pick one, personally. Either one would give you great experience. If you CAN do both feasibly and work and get that experience, I suppose okay, do it, but I think you might find you're spreading yourself thin.
Both will give you a leg up when you start clinicals, and maybe some when you go to look for a job, though it doesn't count as nursing experience. Therefore, you'll be counted as a new grad, but MAY have an advantage over the others. I have extensive prior experience, and while I have an offer from a NM that I know from clinicals, I am having a hard time finding additional work (I'll be graduating in May).
dubmit
2 Posts
So the school I am going to has a lot of prerequisite classes,but they are all prereqs to each other so I can only take 1-2 classes a quarter, and when all things come together I have to time to get CNA certified and EMT-b certified. CNA will be my job but I have put a lot of thought into getting EMT-b certified and volunteering at my fire station. I was hoping maybe it would give me experience and a leg up in the job market. Would it be a waste of $200-$700(depending where i get it from, the fire-station or the EMS school in my area)?