Can I Work as a Certified Nursing Assistant or Medical Assistant While in School?

Countless nursing students and pre-nursing students want (or need) to work while attending school and are seeking employment that will result in allied healthcare experience. This article focuses on the typical schedules of CNAs (certified nursing assistants) and MAs (medical assistants). Nursing Students General Students Article

Imagine you are a nursing student who wants to start accruing healthcare experience now. However, volunteering at a hospital or nursing home might be totally out of the question because you need to be paid for the services that you render. Volunteer experience is valuable in many ways, but let's face it: the unpaid experience will not keep the bill collectors away.

If you are a nursing student, you have several employment options at your disposal that will lead to direct or indirect healthcare experience. You can directly apply for entry-level positions as a direct care staff member (also known as a caregiver), dietary aide, hospital housekeeper (also known as environmental services technician), or unit secretary, and hope that you are hired. The aforementioned occupations generally do not require certification and can be learned with on-the-job training.

You also have the option of completing a relatively short training program to become either a certified nursing assistant (CNA) or medical assistant (MA). Both training programs can be completed within a matter of months. In addition, the tuition can be relatively inexpensive if you complete the training program at a community college, state-funded technical school, or adult education program. Beware of the for-profit entities that charge $15,000+ for the same CNA or MA training you would be able to obtain at a fraction of the cost elsewhere.

CNAs and MAs both provide hands-on patient care, albeit in different types of settings. While MAs are typically found working in clinics, doctors offices, community health centers, and other types of outpatient healthcare settings, CNAs usually secure employment at hospitals, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and most types of healthcare settings where inpatient care takes place.

With very few exceptions, most MAs work typical bankers' hours, which are Monday through Friday during the daylight hours. Some MAs work from 7 to 3:00pm, others work from 9 to 5:00pm, and a few work from 11 to 7:00pm. If you are a student who attends a brick-and-mortar nursing school, the customary working hours of the MA might be problematic because, in most cases, your schooling will be scheduled during the day. Although a handful of nursing schools are progressive enough to offer night programs to accommodate busy working adults with day jobs, the vast majority of schools of nursing have class offerings and clinical rotations strictly during daylight hours.

On the other hand, CNAs work various types of schedules. 12-hour shifts are popular at many inpatient healthcare facilities, and some workplaces even offer 16-hour shifts to enable employees to have four or five days off per week. The 8-hour shifts are normally from 7 to 3:00pm, 3 to 11:00pm, and 11 to 7:00am. Many of my classmates worked as CNAs on the 11 to 7:00am shift and attended school during the day. It was hard for these men and women, but they did it. Some students work three 12-hour shifts as CNAs on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays while focusing on school from Monday through Thursday.

Personally, I completed a training program to become a medical assistant and was never able to secure employment as a MA. I ended up accepting an entry-level position as a direct care staff member at a group home for developmentally disabled adults. My working hours were from midnight to 8:00am. I later became a licensed vocational nurse (LVN). When I eventually returned to school to become a registered nurse (RN), I worked 16-hour weekend double shifts every Saturday and Sunday as a LVN in a nursing home while using Monday through Friday to attend an RN bridge program full time.

In my humble opinion, the CNA role offers the most flexible scheduling for a nursing student who needs to earn money and gain valuable experience while attending school. The MA role is vital to healthcare, but the typical working hours are often too inflexible for many nursing students.

Feel free to read Non-CNA Jobs You Can Work While You're A Student

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
Hi @TheCommuter!

I just got accepted at Los Angeles Southwest College's RN program for the fall and I have an interview for a CNA position in a hospital on Monday!

What a difference two months and a change in tude' can make!

;)

Thanks for the update. I hope your rock the interview and get the job! And congratulations on your acceptance into Southwest College!
Hi @TheCommuter!

I just got accepted at Los Angeles Southwest College's RN program for the fall and I have an interview for a CNA position in a hospital on Monday!

What a difference two months and a change in tude' can make!

;)

I hope you get the job!!!!

I work as CNA in a hospital and I love it! I'm in second semester or an ASN program...I also want to become a Nurse Practitoner so I pick their brains everytime I see one! :)

The experience is really invaluable and although you won't be in the nurse role you get to see a glimpse into what your life will be as a nurse and not to mention once you get into a hospital it is MUCH easier to move up rather than being an outsider trying to get in.

And I agree people should be CNA's before they enter Nursing school! For 1) the experience 2) what if nursing isn't for you and you don't know it until 2-4 years later?? and 3) RNs should experience the "grunt work" we go through as CNA's!! ;);)

Specializes in NICU & PICU.

When I was a student in the 2nd year of faculty of nursing I started my career as a bed side nurse under training unpaid of course to learn nursing skills in a private health center & after 1 month I was ready for the paid job and I repeated this in different fields of nursing Hemodialysis, NICU, PICU, Medical and surgical department and I became sharply skillful in the fourth year of my studying

Specializes in surgical, geriatrics.

My 6 years CNA/MA experience is old but was incredibly valuable and how I ended up in nursing - they were rough jobs but I really loved them. I got to work in LTC, dermatology, plastic surgery and home care and it really fueled me to go back to school. I had some wonderful , LPN, RN and MD mentors who taught me so much - things I'm using in nursing school now. My last job was in 2000 (I ended up leaving after college), is that too long ago to add to my resume now? I'm volunteering as well but it's not the same...I miss being a MA a lot but I can't work in my accelerated program, at least during this leg of it.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
My last job was in 2000 (I ended up leaving after college), is that too long ago to add to my resume now? I'm volunteering as well but it's not the same...I miss being a MA a lot but I can't work in my accelerated program, at least during this leg of it.
I personally wouldn't include any experience on the resume if it's more than ten years old. Certain aspects of society can be ageist, and this includes some hiring managers, so they might look at the dates and conclude you're 'older' than you really are.

Hi,

I would love to work as nursing assistant (CNA) while I'm in ADN program.

I do have CNA license and actually applied a big hospital in the area. I was a volunteer for over a year at the hospital (I was awarded the best volunteer for 2 times), and I saw the hospital hires many nursing students as CNA.

HOWEVER, I was told by a talent recruiter that the hospital hires only BSN students not ADN...

The recruiter told me I'm great candidate....but because I go to a community college, I was not able to get the job.

The community college I go has a better passing rate for NCLEX than other 4 years colleges around here!

I feel like it is some kind of discrimination. I am bummed.

Did anyone got a student nursing job even though you were in ADN program?

Does a hospital prefer BSN students over AND students even though it is CNA job? I understand a hospital prefer BSNs for RN jobs but for CNAs as well?

Are you trying to get a CNA job or? Because there should be no issues.... That's odd.... I worked as a CNA trough nursing school and was hired afterwards too

Are you trying to get a CNA job or? Because there should be no issues.... That's odd.... I worked as a CNA trough nursing school and was hired afterwards too

Thank you for your reply. Yes, I was trying to get a part-time CNA job or Student Nursing job and actually called for the interview at the hospital.

However, during the interview, the recruiter was reviewing my resume. She asked me about my school and said "Oh, you are ADN student? I am so sorry I did not notice that sooner. We hire BSN students as part-time CNAs, but not ADNs."

She said I have good reputations as a volunteer (because I was awarded) and encouraged me to apply to the position after transferring to BSN program (but I will have RN license at the time...)

I thought, just like you, it did not make any sense to me...

I am wondering that now, many hospitals prefer BSN students even for CNA jobs?

I am planning to transfer to RN to BSN program after graduating. I believed going to a community college was great option since it is cheep. Did I make a big mistake for going to a community college!?

That's crazy I've never heard of that. Ever in my area. No it's not a mistake... Seems like that hospital is making a huge mistake and miss out on a ton of wonderful talent.... So I wonder if a CBA decided to go to nursing school and an ADN does she get let go? It doesnt make sense

That's crazy I've never heard of that. Ever in my area. No it's not a mistake... Seems like that hospital is making a huge mistake and miss out on a ton of wonderful talent.... So I wonder if a CBA decided to go to nursing school and an ADN does she get let go? It doesnt make sense

I know! Thank you! I though exactly the same thing...

I saw some CNAs there who are still taking prerequisites to get into nursing programs. The hospital can't fire them even they start going to ADN programs, right!?

Well... I asked many CNAs there while I was volunteering and met one person who was going to ADN program at a private college in the area. The private college has both ADN and BSN program. She was hired... So I'm assuming that it is not about ADN but it is about going to a community college!?

I am going to try to apply other hospitals but worried that other hospitals also prefer BSNs over ADNs for CNA or Student Nursing positions.

I don't know why that would matter?!? I mean I'd just try other hospitals. I wouldn't focus on the ADN student thing since your not applying for a nurse position. I always just said I was in nursing school with graduation date of blank. And most student nurse positions you needed your permit too

Hi,

I would love to work as nursing assistant (CNA) while I'm in ADN program.

I do have CNA license and actually applied a big hospital in the area. I was a volunteer for over a year at the hospital (I was awarded the best volunteer for 2 times), and I saw the hospital hires many nursing students as CNA.

HOWEVER, I was told by a talent recruiter that the hospital hires only BSN students not ADN...

The recruiter told me I'm great candidate....but because I go to a community college, I was not able to get the job.

The community college I go has a better passing rate for NCLEX than other 4 years colleges around here!

I feel like it is some kind of discrimination. I am bummed.

Did anyone got a student nursing job even though you were in ADN program?

Does a hospital prefer BSN students over AND students even though it is CNA job? I understand a hospital prefer BSNs for RN jobs but for CNAs as well?

I'm an ADN student and I just got hired at a magnet hospital. BSN students usually have a leg up when applying for RN positions but having bedside patient care experience as a tech will help immensely when applying for nursing jobs- in my opinion. I've been a PCT for about 8 years and have seen ADN and BSN applicants get hired.