Published Apr 30, 2013
DSoler71
2 Posts
I can't believe it! My strategy for completing my pre-reqs worked! I received my letter last week and I am walking on cloud 9! 41 years old and beginning a brand new chapter in my life! It is never too late!
haiimdenise
23 Posts
Congrats! :) !! Celebration cake time?
Sassenach
29 Posts
Wonderful! What was your strategy?
Yes! Lot's of cake is in order! My strategy at first was started based on the fear of the unknown. I was 38 years old, a husband of 18 years, a father of a 9 year old, and SURPRISE! a baby girl on the way. I hadn't been in school for 20 years and back then I had goofed off so bad with my fiance, now wife, so my standing GPA was 2.5. So that would definitely not have gotten me in! So luckily I found out that my college offers grade amnesty to get into competitive programs, such as Nursing. Which is great, but it gets rid of the good with the bad. I applied for it and all classes from back then are masked from the selection committee, even ones I could possibly use for pre req's (1101 English). So basically being old gave me a do over, lol. So I decided that I really only have one shot at this so I said to myself, no matter what I would only take one class of the eleven pre reqs per semester. I work 50 hours a week at night as a manager, so it's pretty hard to balance home, school, and work. By focusing on only one class I was able to get A's in 10 of the 11 classes. A received a B in Healthcare Math (which was actually ok as it was only a one credit class). I finished with a 3.86 GPA and a 93% combined score on the HESI (Nursing entrance exam). My school has no waiting list for the program, it is strictly 60% your GPA and 40% HESI result. I truly feel I also had an advantage as I think as you mature, you take school more seriously as you truly know the value of an education having been out in the workforce for 20 years. Studying has come so much easier. Finally, the last three parts of my strategy are simple. # 1: I left all 4 of the most difficult pre reqs for last (Nutrition, AP1, Micro Bio, and AP2). So they les into the Program, which prepares me for tough classes). # 2: I found an amazing study buddy, and lastly # 3: Flash Cards are your friends. I can't study from a giant page of notes. I converted all notes into a question answer such as: what does ADH stand for on the front and Anti Diaretic Hormone on the back. I practiced that method with all my Psych classes and others so by the time I reached AP1 I had it down pat. So I hope you can take something from my strategy, obviously, everyone is different and my situation may be unique as not everyone has 2 and 1/2 years to finish the pre reqs. However, I am a strong believer in quality over quantity, doing it right the first time so you don't have to do it again, lol. I wish you all the luck, because now I have attack the next step and my study buddy and I have to come up with a new strategy. I also have to possibly quit my job to accommodate the class load. We will see....my future is now wide open, but I feel that I am doing today what others won't so tomorrow I can do what they can't!
Swagedsoul
3 Posts
...I'm a 43 year old male and I will also be attending LSSC for nursing this fall. Like you, work close to 50 hours a week, and am facing having to quit my primary job in order to go. Frankly, I'm more scared about that than I've ever been about being a first time college student at age 40 and being in the nursing program itself. Never really not been gainfully employed and I'm a single guy...so I'm not sure how this is gonna work...it'd be a shame to have fought my way through the pre-reqs, applied and gotten in...and then not be able to go because of finances...
lifelearningrn, BSN, RN
2,622 Posts
I went back to school in my mid-30s part time, I'll be 41 this summer and I'm starting my last semester of a BSN program in August! (yay) Both of y'all can do it. I quit working in '09 to go to school full time to speed up the process, and while things are tighter right now, in the long run it'll be worth it.
AM326
140 Posts
congrats hun!!!!!
sarahamelia
68 Posts
I know this is an old thread but how difficult is it to get accepted to Lake Sumter. I read their info packet and their selection process seems a little bias. They would first accept students who are being re-admitted, then those who are residents of lake or sumter counties, then non residents of those counties, lastly transfer students.
xoCrash
246 Posts
Rehashing an old thread.. I'm an Orange County resident but thinking of applying to the Clermont campus. Where are clinicals held?
kattiiiie
13 Posts
Anyone else applying this year?
jordanpatriots
12 Posts
I might apply next year. I would've this year if I was certain I would go this route but I took extra prerequisites for the general transfer AA that I wouldn't even need for an ASN. I'm curious as what the GPA requirements are generally the cut-off for this school.
kekepania90
4 Posts
What is the difference between Lake Sumter state college and Concorde university? I am 40 years old and want to go back to school for RN. Please help with any useful answer so I can make a decision on where to go! Thank you!!