Published
In my area, to go for ADN, the student needs to have a lot of courses to be accepted to the ADN program..It will take a year to complete or a year and a half to complete the courses..So when a student goes into an ADN program and graduates, the student actually spent 3 to 3.5 years in college rather than two years..BSN is for 4 years..In reality, the education requirment has just a slight difference..
HOTLY debated topic and has been "done" so many times here before, therefore:
Please see this thread:
https://allnurses.com/forums/f118/adn-vs-bsn-entry-level-nursing-151423.html#post1590293
And please reserve further discussion of ADN versus BSN for that thread. Thank you for understanding.
MLRN
8 Posts
Hello everyone!! I am currently doing some research for a debate in regards to RN vs BSN and patient care.
Is a patient getting better care if the RN has their BA or is the care the same with a ADN? Does a BSN have better critical thinking skills?
I have seen different theories and was wondering what "nurses"
believe is best.
Thanks for your imput.
:monkeydance: YEAH!!!!!! I graduate from Nursing school Aug 18th:monkeydance: