Published
If I remember correctly, you also posted that you want to transfer from your current school in another thread. My advice to you is to make your current school your primary focus, even if it's not the BSN you planned on. Finish and ACE you prereqs, apply for the program at your school and keep the option for completing your ADN and applying to an RN to BSN later. Transferring into a program even if you haven't started clinicals is very difficult as schools favor their own.
Sent from my iPhone using allnurses
In the metro area where I live, competition for nursing school admissions is fierce, especially for community college nursing programs due to the cheap tuition. The regional state universities are also highly competitive.
In this area it is slightly easier to get admitted into nursing programs at private nonprofit universities (Texas Christian Univ, Southwestern Adventist Univ) due to the expensive tuition. It is easiest to be admitted into the investor-owned schools (Concorde Career Institute, Fortis, ITT Technical Institute).
If I remember correctly, you also posted that you want to transfer from your current school in another thread.
Yes, but I did not know transferring into a nursing program could be this difficult. I honestly thought it would just be like applying to any regural nursing program. But I'm also pretty sure the school would pick their own students before they even acknowledge me. And this is not even a competitive university to get into for transfer students, it's just the nursing program.
In this area it is slightly easier to get admitted into nursing programs at private nonprofit universities (Texas Christian Univ, Southwestern Adventist Univ) due to the expensive tuition. It is easiest to be admitted into the investor-owned schools (Concorde Career Institute, Fortis, ITT Technical Institute).
You're right! My guidance counselor even told me about this as well and she said that other people tend to flock more to the cheaper schools for the reasonable tuition and then that makes the school become highly competitive. While the other expensive schools will have available seats open.
Yes, but I did not know transferring into a nursing program could be this difficult. I honestly thought it would just be like applying to any regural nursing program. But I'm also pretty sure the school would pick their own students before they even acknowledge me. And this is not even a competitive university to get into for transfer students, it's just the nursing program.
Best bet is to pursue the program at the school you're already in. Schools absolutely favor their own students and nursing programs are more or less separate schools within a university or college- it's not like transferring schools. They're separate entities with separate and more strict admissions criteria, requirements, and intense competition. Oftentimes there are 1000+ applications for less than 100 seats.
Still apply to other programs because even your own school isn't guaranteed to admit you to the clinical program, but no matter what you do you'll have to complete your prerequisites before you spend your time and money applying.
Sent from my iPhone using allnurses
kariace
69 Posts
So I just got an email back from one of the nursing programs I planned on applying to:
I'm actually really glad that I emailed the school first since I was going to pay that $65 bucks for the application fee.
Well now back to the drawing board...