Nursing Students ADN/BSN
Published Jul 9, 2010
Will I have a higher chance of getting a better job if I do a BSN?
I'm trying to see which program I should do.
Will both lead to a RN? What's the difference?
Thank you!
kenpochic
220 Posts
This message is contradicting. You say ADN programs take two years and they get a job quicker, but then say the programs have waiting lists that take years long where BSN doesn't. I believe whether BSN or ADN if you are a new grad it is difficult to be hired anywhere due to the economy right now and not just in your area. It is more to do with experience-actual working as a nurse experience and not BSN/ADN. Just to clarify for the OP the community colleges core nursing classes takes two years to complete. There are still required pre-reqs. prior to starting that 2-yr. program. In reality, an ADN cannot be completed in two years if you are doing traditional route regardless if there is a waitlist or not.
I applied to an ADN program @ BCC and I got accepted and I start in August. Not every ADN program is a waitlist program. My program is 18 months.
SomedayIWillBe
71 Posts
Are RN-BSN's only for people who don't already have a bachelor's? If I have a degree in Sociology and then get my RN, can I still become a BSN?
PacoUSA, BSN, RN
3,445 Posts
RN-BSN programs are for licensed nurses who are graduates of an ADN or diploma nursing program. In your case (assuming your degree in sociology is a bachelors) you can only get a BSN degree by pursuing an accelerated BSN program or transferring into a traditional BSN program. One does not "become a BSN" by simply having a non-nursing bachelor's and getting an RN via an ADN program.
Thanks for "clarifying". I understand that one can not magically have a BSN with a non-nursing bachelors and an ADN. My question is, is an RN-BSN program only for those who have never gotten a bachelors in anything? My bachelors degree in sociology makes me ineligible for an RN-BSN program after I complete my ADN?
No not at all, you CAN pursue an RN-BSN program after your ADN even though you have a prior bachelors. Sorry I did not "clarify" enough ... I may very well be doing that myself in the event I am unable to afford an accelerated BSN program. In fact, there are some RN-MSN programs out there if you're so inclined, where a non-nursing bachelors degree and and ADN are accepted.
CapeCodMermaid, RN
6,090 Posts
I've been a nurse since 1982. At no time during a job interview was I asked what 'kind' of nurse I was. RN is RN. I was, however, once asked by a patient---an MD---where I had gone to school. There were 3 nurses on the floor that day. He refused the BSN, the Associates Degree nurse and told the supervisor he would only let me take care of him since I had gone to a hospital school of nursing and therefore was the only 'real' nurse. Go figure.