Working while in school

Nursing Students Pre-Nursing

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Hey everyone,

I had a few questions about working while in school to become a nurse. Just a little back story; I'm a 25yr old male, finishing my pre-reqs online this summer, probably starting nursing school at Miami-Dade College January 2013. I'm currently employed in retail, part-time, and have been successful so far juggling work and classes. Questions are as follows...

1) Once I begin actual nursing school, would maintaining the part-time job (20-25hrs/week) be feasible

2) Would leaving the retail job for something more medically oriented be beneficial for resume/experience purposes?

I'd appreciate any input I could get. Thank you!

Hello all! I am starting my senior year this coming semester. I really think it depends on your personality and your determination. If you want to become a nurse, or anything for that matter, NOTHING will stop you. I left home at an early age and always worked full time and went to school. I had no choice, there was no one to pay my rent, car payment, and other bills but me. I work full time in veterinary medicine and go to school full time as well and still manage A's and B's. I am not going to tell you it has been easy, it hasn't. I had to move in with a friend, I had to sell pretty much everything I own, give up sleep, but it I can finally see the finish line!! I am glad I have had to do things this way, because once it is over and I no longer have to count pennys I know that I will appreciate it even more. Good luck to you, if I can do it anyone can!

Specializes in Cardiac, CVICU.

I think part of it depends on your job. I haven't started nursing school yet, but freshman year I worked and went to school. I worked about 18-20 hours/week in a hospital as a dietetic aide, while doing 17 credits my first semester. That wasn't too hard, but it was exhausting. My second semester I had microbiology and my professor said that I needed to spend 4 hours every day in intense study (he wasn't kidding). I worked about 10 hours/week on the side, which wasn't so bad. Although, school gets harder and harder!

I would suggest that you should talk with your manager and see if you can work a few hours on the weekends. See how that goes and work from there. It it affects your academics, you should quit your job. Don't let your job jeopardize your nursing school. Nursing school is an investment that, if done well, will pay off in the end. That is your goal.

Specializes in Transitional Nursing.

I think all nurses/students should be CNA's first. IMO, you get experience with patients and patient care as well as the opportunity to learn provided you work alongside Nurses willing to teach you. It also lets you know how important CNAs can be, and how hard they work.

I also think it gives you a good idea if nursing is something you are capable of and what it is really like, because nursing school is very different than the real world.

It also gives you the ability to work shifts that can be tailored to your school schedule, and bosses are much more likely to understand scheduling needs.

All of that being said, It is going to be much harder to do well in school if you are working. It is all about planning, and prioritizing. If you work 3 nights a week, more likely than not you are going to have to give up any social life what so ever. If you work over nights you may be able to study at work depending on the type of facility. Even in retail, some jobs have downtime where you have the chance to read.

Thats just my .02 cents. :-) Good luck.

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