Bergen Community College Nursing Program Question

Published

Last Thursday I was at the college for the purpose of collecting my Chemistry grade with some classmates. Apparently, there was a graduation ceremony for RN's going on that night as well, and my friends started talking to one student to ask her about the program. I didn't hear the entire conversation, but one of my cohorts told me the student had stated that ELEVEN people had failed out of NUR-181 alone during her course! :eek:

Now, there's always a chance there was some sort of misunderstanding or miscommunication, but does this sound right? For what it's worth, I would think the application process and competitiveness of getting in to the program would assure a strong student population, so it makes me nervous to hear these things. I already received some insight from someone privately, but I was wondering what the public population made of this info.

Thanks!

Hey,

I am in 601 as well. I went last Friday to get fitted for my uniform but I haven't received it yet. Looking forward to meeting everyone in January.

I picked up 2 shirts with patch, 2 pants and 2 pins for $100. They stitched the patch while you wait. They make the name pins while you try on your pants and shirt. No parking in front so I have to go to a parking lot 2 blocks away. They didn't have to hem my pants so I was out within 30mins.

fyi -

  • agreement signed

    lyndhurst, n.j. (december 13, 2010) - bergen community college and kean university today entered into a dual-enrollment partnership to offers bachelor of science nursing degree (bsn) completion program that will enable nursing students to earn their bachelor's degree at bergen.

    the agreement, signed by bergen president dr. g. jeremiah ryan and kean president dr. dawood farahi at bergen community college at the meadowlands in lyndhurst, will mean that nursing students starting at bergen next semester will be able to take courses toward a bsn from kean while completing their associate in applied science degree at bergen.

    "they also will be permitted to take a few upper division nursing courses here or at bergen community college at the meadowlands. kean will assign a faculty member to the bergen-kean partnership with an office at bergen's meadowlands facility," said joan murko, director of the registered nurse program at bergen.

    "bringing the kean bsn completion program to bergen will be a significant benefit to nursing students, nursing education and to the community of healthcare providers in bergen county. in general, hospitals and medical offices rely on community colleges to prepare future generations of nurses," said dr. ryan, adding that the college is a leading provider of training for registered nurses in bergen county.

    "you cannot go into a hospital emergency room or a doctor's office in bergen county without meeting a nurse who took his or her training at bergen," dr. ryan said.

    the bergen-kean partnership creates advantages for hospitals, many of which now prefer registered nurses that hold a bsn, as well as for nursing students.

    having nurses that have attained a bsn helps hospitals such as hackensack university medical center and the valley hospital in ridgewood maintain magnet award status for nursing excellence from the american nurses credentialing center. the magnet award is the nursing profession's highest honor.

    "every time a hospital is reaccredited for magnet status, the american nurses credentialing center raises the bar. they want a certain amount of nurses to have a bsn," professor murko said. "there also is an advantage to hospitals hiring registered nurses with their associate degree who are working on their bsn because they are going to earn their degree sooner. it will cost the hospitals less in tuition reimbursement because nurses in the bergen-kean program can earn bsn in year-and-one-half instead of two years after their associate degree.

    "it's also a win-win for kean because it guarantees them a certain number of students," she said.

    "giving students the flexibility to complete their bsn degrees at community college campuses is a cost-effective model for students, the participating community colleges, and kean university," said kean president dr. dawood farahi.

    bergen is one of five community colleges that have collaborated or are in the process of collaborating with kean university in the bsn program. the others are essex county college, middlesex county college, ocean county college and raritan valley community college.

    "this is another example of new jersey's community colleges coming together in a statewide way to solve a statewide challenge," said new jersey council of county colleges president dr. lawrence nespoli. "healthcare providers are in need of more nurses with bsn degrees, and many of our community college nursing students - past and present - want to earn this credential. we are grateful to kean university for partnering with us to provide this degree completion program on our community college campuses."

    students who hold an associate degree in nursing from bergen will be able to enroll in the kean university partnership as long as they maintained at least a 2.0 grade point average and already hold their state of new jersey registered nurse license. students who complete the program earn a bsn degree from kean university. participating students must successfully complete 125 credits to earn the kean university bsn degree. up to 88 community college credits are eligible for acceptance as transfer credits, and a minimum of 37 credits will be kean upper division courses, including 31 nursing credits.

    bergen community college (www.bergen.edu) based in paramus is a public two-year coeducational college, enrolling nearly 17,000 students at locations in paramus, the philip j. ciarco jr. learning center in hackensack and bergen community college at the meadowlands in lyndhurst. the college offers associate degree, certificate and continuing education programs in a variety of fields.
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DaddyO,

so what does that mean? since we are starting next semester in the spring, we can graduate with a bsn? i'm confused.

no ...we have a better chance of transferring to Kean to get a bsn .. provided we hold a 2.0 GPA

below is the major idea:

"Students who hold an associate degree in nursing from Bergen will be able to enroll in the Kean University partnership as long as they maintained at least a 2.0 grade point average and already hold their State of New Jersey Registered Nurse license. Students who complete the program earn a BSN degree from Kean University. Participating students must successfully complete 125 credits to earn the Kean University BSN degree. Up to 88 community college credits are eligible for acceptance as transfer credits, and a minimum of 37 credits will be Kean upper division courses, including 31 nursing credits."

Can we make a running list of who is in what class for this Spring '11 Level1? I have a feeling we are going to spend alot of time together. I might as well get to know you guys before class starts.

NUR-181/182/183-601

Earl M

Rena - classmate in BIO-104 - he was also accepted and will be in 601

Gabby820

Yessi1286

AmHausch

NUR-181/182/183-602

missmoone

kami927

Anybody working fulltime here? Gabby?

I work full-time

what time? i work M-F from 5 am till 130.. im up by 4am.... works with my schedule but then again... maybe its going to be alot... what do u think?

I work 8:30-4:30. It will have to work for me. My job is how

I'm paying for school.

same for me... i really have no option...

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