Published
You must attend and complete an approved LPN program in order to be eligible to sit for the NCLEX-PN. LPN's receive fundamentals and basic nursing concepts, medical/surgical, mental health, and maternal-child health in just one year. Typically, diploma and ADN programs focus on fundamentals and nursing concepts and medica/surgical during the first year with mental health, maternal-child health, critical care, and leadership happening in the second year.
You will need to check with your state Board. Some states allow this, others do not. Then once you find out that your state does allow it, then you have to check with your nursing school. There are nursing schools that refuse to sign off on the paperwork for their students. Good luck.
Really? I never knew that. Wish I had. I would have challenged the NCLEX LPN a long time ago!! :chuckle
After 1 year of my ADN program in Arizona, I could have done a summer class on pediatrics, or was it geriatrics, and then I could sit for the LPN boards. But, I didn't think there was much point because after I do the summer session, study for the NCLEX-LPN, and sit the exam, and then find a job as an LPN, which is hard to find for a new grad, I would have my ADN in nursing.
merrywhiterose
286 Posts
I've completed one yr. of an RN program, is it possible to take the LPN boards w/o graduating from an LPN program?