Should I Stay Or Should I Go????

Nursing Students Pre-Nursing

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Hi all, I was accepted into a generic bsn program that starts this fall. I was also accepted into an accelerated program that starts in Jan 14. I would be finished with the generic bsn fall 2016 (no summer sessions). The accelerated spring 15. The accelerated program is $250 more per credit hr than the generic. I will only work registry on my unit regardless of which program I choose. I will have to live off of my savings & take out additional student loans to cover the remaining.

My question is: Do I do the generic bsn with summer breaks? Technically, I won't get my license until early 2017. Or do I do the accelerated, finish spring of 15 & get license that summer? I'm worried that the accelerated program might be too much to handle. I would hate myself if I couldn't make it through. I would always feel like I should have taken my time, and stuck with my first choice. The nurses on my unit told me to do the generic. It's not worth the risk.

I just really want to finish sooner. However, I'm really scared. I don't want to make the wrong decision. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you all

Specializes in Cardio-Pulmonary; Med-Surg; Private Duty.

It's going to be VERY difficult to do the accelerated program while working, IMO. Most people have trouble with the regular program while working full-time or even part-time.

Yes, you'll be able to work as an RN sooner with the accelerated program, but you'll also be paying more for the program, so the difference in income between each academic path is smaller than if the programs cost the same. (In my case, I paid out-of-district tuition rates, but I also graduated about five years sooner [because of wait list length], so the increased income more than made up for the increased tuition. But your years-working-as-a-nurse difference is not as great as mine.)

You'll also give up ANY hope of having any kind of life whatsoever if you're doing the accelerated program. You will work, study, and occasionally eat/sleep -- nothing else. No social life, no downtime, no family life, no surfing the web, no Facebook or email with friends, etc. Some people are okay with that, but most are not.

Another consideration is your academic ability. Even people who don't work at a job while going to school find an accelerated program to be very difficult, simply because it is SO much information in such a short period of time. What happens if you fail out of the accelerated program... would you have to go back on the waiting list for the regular program? Would you have to start paying your student loans off immediately, even if you don't have the RN-salary coming in?

Every person has to make this type of decision based on their own circumstances -- nobody can know your own life situation and your personal aptitudes. But based on people I know and things I've read here on AllNurses.com, I would stay with the regular program for a few different reasons, mainly: A) you're taking out loans for your education, and the accelerated program costs more; and B) you're going to be working while going to nursing school.

I think an accelerated program might not be a good fit for you at this time, especially at $250 more a credit hour! Conservatively at 30 hours that $7500 more. Will you make so much more money in 18 months to justify the $7500?

For reference my entire ADN program cost around $5000 total.

Specializes in Surgical/MedSurg/Oncology/Hospice.

My suggestion is that, if you must work, to go with the traditional program and not the accelerated program. Working is difficult during any nursing program, and you'll be in less debt going the traditional route as well. Good luck!

Specializes in Hospital Education Coordinator.

setting yourself up for a lot of anxiety if you do the accelerated while working. Also incurring more cost. Remember, you have the REST OF YOUR LIFE to be a nurse

Specializes in Peds, Float, Ambulatory, Telemetry (new).

I went through an accelerated program. My job was prn and it was about one weekend a month. The program is hard but if you think you could manage then do it. Maybe write down the pros and cons about each program and see which one is a better fit. I know you are excited about getting your license sooner but you have to think about the long run and what is better for you. Good luck and tell us your decision.

I would also recommend the traditional option. It's less stressful and less intense than the accelerated. Plus, in the traditional option, you could work during the summers, which would provide extra money during the school year and could help make connections for your job search post-grad. I'm in a three-year traditional program right now, and trust me, once you get toward the end, it just flies by. Good luck with whichever path you choose.

It's going to be VERY difficult to do the accelerated program while working, IMO. Most people have trouble with the regular program while working full-time or even part-time.

You'll also give up ANY hope of having any kind of life whatsoever if you're doing the accelerated program. You will work, study, and occasionally eat/sleep -- nothing else. No social life, no downtime, no family life, no surfing the web, no Facebook or email with friends, etc. Some people are okay with that, but most are not.

Speaking as a grad from a rigorous ABSN program, that's not the case if you have good time management. Even in an ABSN, you have to make time for yourself. I used to study on the beach, sit outside and study, went out to dinner with friends, saw my family regularly. I didn't have a Facebook account back then, but I certainly did my share of Internet surfing that wasn't school related. Add to that my husband was overseas and a phone call was a major undertaking and Skype at the time was woefully inadequate.

The key to an ABSN is time management. If you have it down, you can do all that stuff and more. I certainly didn't suffer for 16 months though I'll confess to working my butt off.

The work thing, though, to me, is dead on. We were told NOT to work.

Specializes in Cardio-Pulmonary; Med-Surg; Private Duty.
Speaking as a grad from a rigorous ABSN program, that's not the case if you have good time management. Even in an ABSN, you have to make time for yourself. I used to study on the beach, sit outside and study, went out to dinner with friends, saw my family regularly. I didn't have a Facebook account back then, but I certainly did my share of Internet surfing that wasn't school related. Add to that my husband was overseas and a phone call was a major undertaking and Skype at the time was woefully inadequate.

The key to an ABSN is time management. If you have it down, you can do all that stuff and more. I certainly didn't suffer for 16 months though I'll confess to working my butt off.

The work thing, though, to me, is dead on. We were told NOT to work.

That was my point... that if the OP was working a job too, there would be "no life" outside of work, school/studying, and occasional sleep.

An accelerated program is certainly do-able if not working. But working while doing an accelerated program is unnecessarily putting yourself at risk for failure, for the vast majority of people. Burnout is a huge risk in nursing, there's no need to burn one's self out while in school as well! :)

Ah - I didn't get that.

I agree one hundred percent, brillo. :)

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